[
UK
/dʒʌdʒmˈɛntəl/
]
[ US /dʒədʒˈmɛnəɫ, dʒədʒˈmɛntəɫ/ ]
[ US /dʒədʒˈmɛnəɫ, dʒədʒˈmɛntəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
depending on judgment
I think that she is too judgmental to be a good therapist
a judgmental error
How To Use judgmental In A Sentence
- Don't allow judgmental and critical people to influence and manipulate you, as you are ready to make a final decision about the past.
- At this point in the play, folk culture of Lenten abnegation and christening joy collides with mannered personal interaction and judgmental asperity.
- The parity in tennis offers a tonic to that grim statistic, a rare shaft of sunlight in a judgmental world. Times, Sunday Times
- When I say "misanthropic," by the way, I'm neither being judgmental nor breaking any news. News & Politics
- They emphasised that volunteers must be non-judgmental in their dealings with people and non-directive in their counselling.
- Many clients regarded him applauded the fact that he would dispense advice without being the least judgmental. Times, Sunday Times
- The problem is that most of my male classmates have become very judgmental towards my dressing style.
- Mr. Rogers has sidestepped this potential aesthetic booby trap by installing everything in the 19th-century manner — paintings "skied" on the walls, and sculpture filling the gallery as it would have been seen in its own day — a nonjudgmental approach that simply treats the work as part of our art and cultural history. The MFA's New Art of the Americas Wing . . .
- One suggestion I would make is that the sense of ouai doesn't seem judgmental, as "reckoning" would imply that there will be a reckoning upon you (and there's no indication that the interjection is present progressive or gerundial), but purely interjectory along the lines of "poor you. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
- He's unjudgmental, unreligious and wary of doctrine. Times, Sunday Times