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judgement

[ UK /d‍ʒˈʌd‍ʒmənt/ ]
[ US /ˈdʒədʒmənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. (law) the determination by a court of competent jurisdiction on matters submitted to it
  2. the cognitive process of reaching a decision or drawing conclusions
  3. an opinion formed by judging something
    he was reluctant to make his judgment known
    she changed her mind
  4. the legal document stating the reasons for a judicial decision
    opinions are usually written by a single judge
  5. the mental ability to understand and discriminate between relations
  6. the capacity to assess situations or circumstances shrewdly and to draw sound conclusions
  7. the act of judging or assessing a person or situation or event
    they criticized my judgment of the contestants

How To Use judgement In A Sentence

  • He combined athleticism, judgement and skill in an irresistible mix - and he was a great sportsman, totally devoid of egomania.
  • The minister had made an amazing error of judgement.
  • According to bury circumstance judgement, put possibly inside circumjacent bigger range in more and dinosaurian fossil, disentomb foreground is very hopeful.
  • What the UN and the West are doing is the colonial thing of merely resorting to bully-boy tactics, Neither would attempt to pass judgement let alone threaten to intervene using military force, in any election held in the Russian Federation or attempt to invade China because it does not have democractic government. Ivory Coast's descent into madness
  • As such, the operation was essentially different from planning which involved prior political judgements about what ought to be achieved.
  • I have used my interviews with parents as a counterpoint to a professional judgement.
  • Her judgements are based on hearsay rather than evidence.
  • In contrast to Aristotle, Brentano emphasizes the importance of existential judgements with only one term, and claims that predicative judgements are a special case of existential ones.
  • Dynamic corneal thickness measurement contributes to the judgement of degree of corneal endothelium injury.
  • So, Sue asked the DUP councillor, could Katrina have been a divine judgement on born-again Christians?
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