The ideal word would be "conversee" but that obviously isn't correct. "Recipient" doesn't feel right either. I suppose "interlocutor" is somewhat better, but that doesn't refer to the "other", in this context and feels very formal.
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"My interlocutor" refers to just the other party. I suspect this is for naming a database column, in which case interlocutor would indeed be appropriate, because in context it cannot refer to you. – Andrew Leach Feb 05 '17 at 14:10
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1Possible duplicate of Can "conversant" be a noun? Note John Lawler's comment: There's another, rather uncommon, sense, however, which is a noun and means 'one party in a conversation', e.g, Her conversants* never failed to remark on her bell-like laughter.* – FumbleFingers Feb 05 '17 at 15:00
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@AndrewLeach it is indeed for a database :-) Many thanks – Daniel Feb 05 '17 at 15:23
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Well, as long as we're collecting terms, in the trade one refers to people involved in a prototype 2-person conversation as participants. They can be viewed also by role, and in a prototype 2-person conversation participants alternate between the roles of speaker and addressee. This is the principle of turn-taking, which is fundamental to social organization, among other things. – John Lawler Feb 05 '17 at 16:33