Similar words: judge, adjudge, misjudge, judgement, judgemental, judgment, judgmental, budge. Meaning: [dʒʌdʒ] n. a book of the Old Testament that tells the history of Israel under the leaders known as judges.
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181. The judges ruled that it was the job of Parliament, not the courts, to change the law.
182. The overall standard of all the entries in the competition drew praise from the judges.
183. Apart from that situation the Secretary of State is not in my judgment bound to accept the advice of the judges.
184. Thirty-six hours before his execution, Tennessee judges voted to reconsider his case.
185. Clearly the availability of judgments and recent canons and books on procedure made a difference to the judges.
186. The President acts in consultation with the Chief Justice in making four appointments who have to be former judges.
187. The aim is to create something like this ... and that means the judges methodically comparing furrows.
188. An annual contest for authors of programs that can fool human judges at least some of the time was suspended last year.
189. Suppose there is a convention in some legal community that judges must give both sides an equal opportunity to state their case.
190. And the judges and county officials who work in the Civic Center, he put most of them there(sentencedict.com), too.
191. Law bolstered the moral order of society and judges, as custodians of those values, were deserving of respect and trust.
192. Two judges who were sitting on the case were dead.
193. The three judges I met included the first woman judge to be appointed in Geurrero State.
194. The stereo tape will then be replayed to the Berlin judges who will listen on individual headphones.
195. On Tuesday, Symington vetoed a bill that would have allowed judges to increase prison sentences for hate crimes.
196. Concessions which judges make to workers at one moment in the class struggle may be removed at another.
197. Yet most judges I know are beholden to Power-by that I mean unalterably pledged to the dominant force of the system.
198. Although the appeals court was unanimous in reversing the lower court, the judges each had different reasons for their conclusions.
199. Four other judges concurred.
200. The fate of the prisoners will be decided by a panel of three judges.
201. The Houses of Parliament are also the final arbiters of the tenure of office of judges of the Supreme Court.
202. Instead[sentencedict.com], justice is a commodity designed by a hierarchy of judges still dedicated to the interests of Power.
203. High Court judges are the deputy chairmen of the Parliamentary Boundary Commissions.
204. Judges already have substantial latitude to limit extraneous arguments that might mislead jurors; they could use it more often.
205. Many judges have allowed abuse defenses but reject compulsive gambling syndrome.
206. But judges seldom reach for a dictionary when seeking to develop a new legal concept.
207. The judges liked the pumpkin pie from Gayle's Bakery best.
208. He judges success by how effectively human needs are reconciled with the needs of the ecosystem.
209. For this Act deliberately sought to use the courts and the judges to achieve political ends.
210. Carter-appointed judges ruled in favor of the defendant in 40 percent of the cases, the study found.
More similar words: judge, adjudge, misjudge, judgement, judgemental, judgment, judgmental, budge, nudge, budget, fudge, sludge, smudge, trudge, cudgel, grudge, drudge, last judgment, budgetary, drudgery, budgeting, begrudge, bludgeon, state budget, curmudgeon, budgerigar, budget deficit, capital budget, budget surplus, balanced budget.