Judge
in sentence
1352 examples of Judge in a sentence
Texas prison guards regularly rely on excessive force, the
judge
concluded, officials ignore sexual enslavement, and the state's isolation units function as "virtual incubators of psychoses."
And on the day that a
judge
finally crosses a political line, speaking constitutional truth to usurped power, the government’s refusal to comply threatens the interests and ideals of an articulate and motivated segment of society.
The lender who can’t
judge
the risk goes for investments that promise higher yields.
But what these accountants do not provide is a way to
judge
when deficits are justifiable and when they are not.
Are popular elections an adequate criterion by which to
judge
a country’s commitment to democracy?
If you follow Nobel Prize-winner James Buchanan's utilitarian principle that you should evaluate a society's social welfare by imagining that you have an equal chance of being poor and rich, it is easy to
judge
that the more equal society has a better set of social and economic arrangements.
The opposition CDU leader, Angela Merkel, has linked its program to the ambitious ideas of an outsider, former Constitutional Court
judge
Paul Kirchhof, seeking a dramatic simplification of the tax system.
John Stuart Mill, in his classic defense of liberty, argued that each individual is the best
judge
and guardian of his or her own interests.
Most people do not pay for what they consume; they rely on others to
judge
what they should consume, and prices do not influence these judgments as they do with conventional commodities.
I cannot
judge
the strength of these factions, or whether they know that the falling US current account deficit and dollar may lessen the urgency of adjustment in the rest of the world, but not in China.
In late November, Thomas Griesa, a United States federal
judge
in New York, ordered Argentina to deposit the $1.33 billion owed to holdouts into an escrow account by December 15.
And how would ordinary European citizens
judge
the fairness of the costs, when the man in charge of determining and allocating these costs may decide to seek the French presidency?
Most women also recognize and resent that the media
judge
them more harshly than they
judge
men.
But history will
judge
us by our commitment to a just society governed by law and the willingness to face an ugly truth and say ‘never again.’”
Recently, a Polish vice-premier, Janusz Tomaszewski, was sacked because a special
judge
sent his case to the "lustration" court.
Nevertheless he had to resign, because his colleagues from the rightist, post-Solidarity party now in power decided that anyone merely accused by the special
judge
(even before conviction) must leave his (or her) job in government, parliament or the judiciary.
A special
judge
then checks the truthfulness of their declarations.
Despite the extraordinary scientific and medical accomplishments in the battle against HIV/AIDS so far, history will
judge
us by what we accomplish in the next quarter-century, and how we respond to the challenge of delivering the fruits of our research efforts to those who need them most.
For jailing Liu on the absurd charge of trying to overthrow the Chinese state is typical of the type of thinking found in the closed societies of twentieth-century communism, where the state asserted its absolute right to
judge
every thought and every thinker.
But to
judge
and imprison one’s own mind, or any other mind, is to criminalize civilization.
But it is rarely wise to
judge
financial health by one’s borrowing costs, which can change abruptly.
In a normal bailout procedure, the IMF acts as an impartial
judge
of the troubled country’s debt sustainability; then, if it so chooses, it can step in as the lender of last resort.
A neutral
judge
– not one of the creditors – usually sets the terms in insolvency proceedings.
It came in the form of a young Belgian judge, a Brussels prosecutor, four strapping police officers, and a court clerk, who arrived in this dusty capital to investigate charges filed against Habré in a Belgian court pursuant to that country's long-arm anti-atrocity law, which permits prosecution of the worst human rights crimes no matter where they took place.
The
judge'
s visit - and the Chad government's full cooperation - seemed to give the victims courage, however.
The
judge
and his team visited the five N'Djamena jails, including one in the presidential compound, where Habré's American-trained political police systematically tortured prisoners.
Souleymane Abdoulaye showed the
judge
the sweltering underground cell where, as a boy of fourteen, he was crowded in with 72 other prisoners, only eleven of whom survived the near-starvation regimen.
Sabadet Totodet took the
judge
to a clearing on the outskirts of town where he was forced to dig graves for more than 500 fellow prisoners who died in custody.
The
judge
spent a day examining the newly unearthed files of Habré 's dreaded political police, the Documentation and Security Directorate (DDS), including their reports to Habré on massacres of rival ethnic groups and daily lists of prison deaths.
The
judge
also took the testimony of a number of Habré's DDS directors, and even allowed former victims to confront their torturers face to face.
Back
Next
Related words
Which
Would
Their
People
Should
Could
About
There
Movie
Other
After
Think
Being
Before
Against
Where
Without
Court
Never
Still