retort
verb /rɪˈtɔːt/
  /rɪˈtɔːrt/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they retort |  /rɪˈtɔːt/  /rɪˈtɔːrt/ | 
| he / she / it retorts |  /rɪˈtɔːts/  /rɪˈtɔːrts/ | 
| past simple retorted |  /rɪˈtɔːtɪd/  /rɪˈtɔːrtɪd/ | 
| past participle retorted |  /rɪˈtɔːtɪd/  /rɪˈtɔːrtɪd/ | 
| -ing form retorting |  /rɪˈtɔːtɪŋ/  /rɪˈtɔːrtɪŋ/ | 
- to reply quickly to a comment, in an angry, offended or humorous way- + speech ‘Don't be ridiculous!’ Pat retorted angrily.
- She quickly retorted, ‘What does it matter?’
- retort that… Sam retorted that it was my fault as much as his.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- quickly
- angrily
- furiously
- …
 Word Originverb late 15th cent. (in the sense ‘hurl back an accusation or insult’): from Latin retort- ‘twisted back, cast back’, from the verb retorquere, from re- ‘in return’ + torquere ‘to twist’.

