Judge
in sentence
1352 examples of Judge in a sentence
History will
judge
Berlusconi’s actions, but Italians remain divided.
But it is not useful to rely solely or primarily on outcomes to
judge
a leader.
In any case, one would not expect prize committees or historians to
judge
leaders solely by quantitative criteria.
And Xi will have to
judge
what he can give to satisfy his American visitor without jeopardizing his or the Party’s standing in the eyes of the Chinese people.
To
judge
the moral component of artistic expression, then, we must look not at the person who made it but at the work itself.
Political operatives may also
judge
that an increased sense of danger and insecurity will tilt votes to the Republicans in the US congressional elections in November.
We would
judge
Alexander the Great differently if his conquests had left a toxic legacy that we were still living with today.
While it is entirely premature to
judge
the style and direction that China’s new leaders will take, three early hints are worth noting.
And how can voters
judge
the two candidates?
While image consultants and acting ability can mask a candidate’s character, an integrated life over time is the best basis to
judge
the authenticity of the next president’s temperament and how he will govern.
The late American philosopher John Rawls suggested that the best way to
judge
the rightness of any social policy is to put oneself in the place of the underdogs before reaching a conclusion.
The Security Council would
judge
the legitimacy of such action by whether it met the age-old criteria of just war: the seriousness of the threat, the purpose of the response, whether force is a last resort, whether it is used in a proportionate way, and whether there is a reasonable balance of good and bad consequences.
They disagreed bitterly over whom to back in the race to fill a Senate seat from Alabama; but, at Bannon’s urging, Trump ultimately backed the erratic former state Supreme Court
judge
Roy Moore, who’d been removed from the bench twice, and who lost the race.
The Hidden Goods of 2015PRINCETON – If we were to
judge
the state of the world by the news headlines, 2015 was the year of Islamist terror, especially in Paris.
Bankruptcy should allow local governments to renegotiate their bond debt and, perhaps, their retired employees’ pension and health-care costs (that’s up to a bankruptcy judge).
It is difficult to
judge
who is right, and there are important experts on both sides of the debate.
Still, to
judge
from most media coverage, the parallel sub-prime and packaged loan crises, which are paralyzing global finance, are entirely attributable to banks’ “immorality,” and are in no way due to systemic failure.
The arrest in January 2012 of the chief
judge
of the supreme court, Abdulla Mohamed, on charges of corruption and malpractice was the straw that broke the camel’s back.
The presiding judge, Mr. Justice Eady, rejected the newspaper’s defense, and awarded Max Mosley £60,000 ($115,000) compensation for the invasion of his privacy, the highest damages so far given for a complaint brought under Article 8.
But the bank could not transfer the funds to the creditors: US federal
judge
Thomas Griesa had ordered that Argentina could not pay the creditors who had accepted its restructuring until it fully paid – including past interest – those who had rejected it.
It was the first time in history that a country was willing and able to pay its creditors, but was blocked by a
judge
from doing so.
Top scientists, sheltered by anonymity, can usually spot originality and can
judge
which scientific ideas have real value.
In a crypto-utopia, every single good and service would have its own distinct token, and average consumers would have no way to
judge
the relative prices of different – or even similar – goods and services.
But it should have been clear all along that the IMF, as a major creditor, could not itself be the bankruptcy
judge.
To
judge
from the Japanese press, as well as the DPJ’s plunging poll ratings, disillusion has already set in.
Only then can we ensure that policy debates and decisions are based on fact, and that we are well-equipped to
judge
those who make decisions, engage with them, and ultimately hold them accountable.
MP’s were also shocked to learn that the Dutch candidate for the position of Commissioner for Competition sat on the boards of many powerful financial institutions, which would make her both a
judge
and a party in proceedings before the Commission.
After the
judge
held that some of the activists’ claims were not defamatory, because they were true, McDonald’s began to accept responsibility for its suppliers’ practices.
A bankruptcy
judge
would approve the petition, provided the court was satisfied that the homeowner could make the reduced payments.
They are more likely to
judge
a party, a regime, or an institutional order by asking, "What have you done for me lately?"
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