Judgment
in sentence
802 examples of Judgment in a sentence
If these skills also render them perceptive observers of real societies and provide them with sound judgment, it is hardly by design.
The
judgment
by America’s intelligence community that Iran has suspended its nuclear weapon development program – and, more importantly, that its large-scale uranium enrichment capacity is likely years away – postpones the day when a US president may have to decide between living with or attacking a nuclear Iran.
Last month, Smith issued her
judgment.
(The most recent Dutch report, released after Smith handed down her judgment, confirms that there has been no dramatic increase in euthanasia cases in the Netherlands.)
But the art of leading rests on calculating costs and benefits and exercising
judgment
when the balance is unclear.
In Lee’s judgment, China’s leadership will make a serious effort to avoid a military confrontation with the US – at least for the next several decades.
The logo on the Bulletin’s cover is a clock, the proximity of whose hands to midnight indicates the editors’
judgment
of the precariousness of the world situation.
Capital adequacy was a matter of judgment: examiners would figure out how large a buffer a bank ought to have, taking into account its specific risks.
But, in the 20 years since the highest court in the international system issued its judgment, the states affected by it have still failed to launch “negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament.”
The protests first forced out former President Hosni Mubarak, because his regime was failing to meet their demands; and their
judgment
of the Muslim Brotherhood’s subsequent administration was equally harsh, culminating in former President Mohamed Morsi’s removal from power.
The Judicial Massacre of SrebrenicaThe
judgment
of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) concerning Serbia’s involvement in the massacre of Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica in 1995 should be greeted with considerable ambivalence.
Just as we obey our leaders’ orders to fight and die because we trust their judgment, we entrust our careers and our money to those who run Citigroup and Goldman Sachs and other such banks, because we believe their leaders will be fair to their employees and clients, and honorable in their business practices.
Only an equally complex and highly adaptable monetary-policy approach – one that emphasizes risk management and reliance on policymakers’ judgment, rather than a clear-cut formula – can do that.
The relatively few professional economists who warned of the current crisis were people, it seems, who not only read the scholarly economics literature, but also brought into play more personal judgment: intuitive comparisons with past historical episodes; conclusions about speculative trading, price bubbles, and the stability of confidence; evaluations of the moral purposes of economic actors; and impressions that complacency had set in, lulling watchdogs to sleep.
But it has lain in the drawers of the UNDP Arab Bureau in New York ever since, probably in no small part due to its harsh
judgment
of the Arab power elite.
Human judgment, good and bad, will drive investment decisions and financial-market outcomes for the rest of our lives and beyond.
But Kasparov quickly adjusted to exploit the computer’s weakness in long-term strategic planning, where his
judgment
and intuition seemed to trump the computer’s mechanical counting.
Nevertheless, before rushing to
judgment
about current policy, we should recognize the trend in recent US recoveries of slow job growth.
Following the Times Square bombing attempt, Clinton issued an even harsher judgment: “if a terror attack like the New York bombing were to be successful and found to have originated from that country, there would be very severe consequences.”
Whether an editor publishes cartoons offensive to believers in Muhammad (or Christ, for that matter) is a matter of judgment, almost of taste.
Because non-Americans cannot vote in US elections for him (a pity for Obama, who would probably win a global vote by a landslide), we have to depend on the
judgment
of that 17% of undecided voters watching television this month.
The
judgment
is the largest ever awarded by the arbitration court, and it cannot be appealed.
France and Belgium have begun seizing Russian assets to enforce the
judgment.
This
judgment
was also the largest in that court’s history.
Otherwise, our future will be decided by default circumstances instead of our own collective
judgment.
But the terrorist attacks on the US in September 2001 pressed Japan to recognize that it must begin to exercise greater autonomy and independent
judgment
in formulating and implementing its national security policies.
Her lawyers will likely appeal her conviction to a higher Sharia court, and if necessary, to Nigeria's Supreme Court, but if the
judgment
of the Funtua court stands, Amin Lawal will be stoned to death the moment her daughter is weaned.
But the US prevented Nicaragua from obtaining any compensation by vetoing UN Security Council resolutions that called for enforcement of the ICJ’s
judgment.
Only the Security Council can enforce an international tribunal’s
judgment
on a noncompliant state.
Indeed, we are so far today from the original spirit of the UN Charter that it seems normal for dictatorships to sit in
judgment
of democracies and for Libya to chair the Commission for Human Rights.
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