prejudge

[ US /pɹiˈdʒədʒ/ ]
[ UK /pɹɪd‍ʒˈʌd‍ʒ/ ]
VERB
  1. judge beforehand, especially without sufficient evidence
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How To Use prejudge In A Sentence

  • Even though I already made clear why they are racists -- "Federalist Society" and its friends Neo-Confederates and other "sects" of the avowedly Christian KKK -- I'll make it real simple so this time it might not slip by your prejudgement: Balkinization
  • In 1995 the government's Glass Ceiling Commission (the propagandistic title prejudged the subject) saw proof of sex discrimination in the fact that women were only 5 percent of senior managers at Fortune 1000 industrial and Fortune 500 service companies. Lies, Damned Lies And...
  • Let's not prejudge the situation - we need to hear both sides of the story first.
  • He believes that some part of it is a sponsored propaganda against him, that media has prejudged him and that his actions won't change anything.
  • The old, mindless approach is typified by a dean at the University of Florida who invoked the First Amendment and said he didn't want to "prejudge" Muhammad's speech. On Hate: Censure, Not Censor
  • It disarms criticism, obscures realities, and prejudges results.
  • The Lord Advocate was correct when he said it is the trial process which tests the evidence and decides the guilt or innocence of the accused and that it is in nobody's interest to prejudge the issue or to usurp the function of the court.
  • AFTER THE JUMP -- Gray says he doesn't "feel any pressing need simply to change people for the sake of changing them" -- Norton says not to "prejudge" Republican House -- IDI earns fines for continued group-home violations -- will D.C. GOP ever sit on council again? DeMorning DeBonis: Nov. 4, 2010
  • Daly was the only one, however, that was planet-struck, as the doctor termed it, though he and the purser, who sat in another seat, confessed after they had been introduced to our heroine, that they had been most confoundedly out in their reckoning; and that they would never prejudge any more the beauty of a man’s wife from any knowledge they might have either of the form or visage of her husband. Three Weeks in the Downs, or Conjugal Fidelity Rewarded: exemplified in the Narrative of Helen and Edmund
  • The issue is whether or not the individual juror has prejudged the defendant to the point where they cannot objectively listen to the testimony and they cannot listen to the judge's instructions.
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