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judge
[juhj]
noun
a public officer authorized to hear and decide cases in a court of law; a magistrate charged with the administration of justice.
Synonyms: justicea person appointed to decide in any competition, contest, or matter at issue; authorized arbiter.
the judges of a beauty contest.
Synonyms: arbitratora person qualified to pass a critical judgment.
a good judge of horses.
Synonyms: critic, connoisseuran administrative head of Israel in the period between the death of Joshua and the accession to the throne by Saul.
(especially in rural areas) a county official with supervisory duties, often employed part-time or on an honorary basis.
verb (used with object)
to pass legal judgment on; pass sentence on (a person).
The court judged him guilty.
to hear evidence or legal arguments in (a case) in order to pass judgment; adjudicate; try.
The Supreme Court is judging that case.
to form a judgment or opinion of; decide upon critically.
You can't judge a book by its cover.
to decide or settle authoritatively; adjudge.
The censor judged the book obscene and forbade its sale.
to infer, think, or hold as an opinion; conclude about or assess.
He judged her to be correct.
to make a careful guess about; estimate.
We judged the distance to be about four miles.
(of the ancient Hebrew judges) to govern.
verb (used without object)
to act as a judge; pass judgment.
No one would judge between us.
Synonyms: adjudicate, adjudgeto form an opinion or estimate.
I have heard the evidence and will judge accordingly.
to make a mental judgment.
judge
/ dʒʌdʒ /
noun
a public official with authority to hear cases in a court of law and pronounce judgment upon them Compare magistrate justice justice
a person who is appointed to determine the result of contests or competitions
a person qualified to comment critically
a good judge of antiques
a leader of the peoples of Israel from Joshua's death to the accession of Saul
verb
to hear and decide upon (a case at law)
(tr) to pass judgment on; sentence
(when tr, may take a clause as object or an infinitive) to decide or deem (something) after inquiry or deliberation
to determine the result of (a contest or competition)
to appraise (something) critically
(tr; takes a clause as object) to believe (something) to be the case; suspect
Other Word Forms
- judgeable adjective
- judger noun
- judgeless adjective
- judgelike adjective
- judgeship noun
- rejudge verb
- subjudge noun
- subjudgeship noun
- underjudge noun
- unjudgeable adjective
- unjudged adjective
- unjudgelike adjective
- well-judged adjective
- judgingly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of judge1
Word History and Origins
Origin of judge1
Idioms and Phrases
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
A federal judge has officially shut down Justin Baldoni’s $400-million countersuit against Blake Lively — the latest development in a long and bitter legal feud that has shadowed their movie “It Ends With Us.”
Of the five times a referee has turned down a review at the screen in the past two seasons, two have been judged to be wrong.
The text also proposes that the death penalty can be imposed by a majority of judges and the sentence cannot be commuted once the ruling is handed down.
She was released late last month, weeks after a judge threw out her case.
His announcement came the same day that Maribel Vilaplana, the journalist with who he had lunch on the day of the floods, testified before a judge who is investigating possible negligence.
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