JUDGED
JUDG'ED, participle passive Heard and determined; tried judicially; sentenced; censured; doomed.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
427 entradas
JUDG'ED, participle passive Heard and determined; tried judicially; sentenced; censured; doomed.
JUDG'ER, noun One who judges or passes sentence.
JUDGESHIP, noun judj'ship. The office of a judge.
JUDG'ING, participle present tense Hearing and determining; forming an opinion; dooming.
JUDG'MENT, noun The act of judging; the act or process of the mind in comparing its ideas, to find their agreement or disagreement, and to ascertain truth; or the process of exa...
JUDG'MENT-DAY, noun The last day, or day when final judgment will be pronounced on the subjects of God's moral government.
JUDG'MENT-HALL, noun The hall where courts are held.
JUDG'MENT-SEAT, noun The seat or bench on which judges sit in court.1. A court; a tribunal.We shall all stand before the judgment-seat of Christ. Romans 14:1.
JU'DICATIVE, adjective Having power to judge.
JU'DICATORY, adjective Dispensing justice.JU'DICATORY, noun [Latin judicatorium.] A court of justice; a tribunal.1. Distribution of justice.
JU'DICATURE, noun The power of distributing justice by legal trial and determination. A court of judicature is a court invested with powers to administer justice between man and...
JUDI'CIALLY, adverb In the forms of legal justice; as a sentence judicially declared.1. By way of penalty or judgment; as, to be judicially punished.
JUDI'CIARYnoun [Latin judiciarius.]1. Passing judgment or sentence.2. Pertaining to the courts of judicature or legal tribunals.JUDI'CIARY, noun That branch of government which ...
JUDI'CIOUS, adjective1. According to sound judgment; wise; prudent; rational; adapted to obtain a good end by the best means; used of things. Nothing is more important to succes...
JUDI'CIOUSLY, adverb With good judgment; with discretion or wisdom; skillfully.Longinus has judiciously preferred the sublime genius that sometimes errs, to the middling or indi...
JUDI'CIOUSNESS, noun The quality of acting or being according to sound judgment.
JUG, noun [Low Latin caucus.] A vessel, usually earthen, with a swelling belly and narrow mouth, used for holding and conveying liquors.
JUG'GLE, verb intransitive [Latin joculor, to jest, from jocus, a joke; jocor, to joke;]1. To play tricks by slight of hand; to amuse and make sport by tricks, which make a fals...
JUG'GLER, noun1. One who practices or exhibits tricks by slight of hand; one who makes sport by tricks of extraordinary dexterity, by which the spectator is deceived. Jugglers a...
JUG'GLING, participle present tense Playing tricks by slight of hand; deceiving.JUG'GLING, noun The act or practice of exhibiting tricks of legerdemain.
JUG'GLINGLY, adverb In a deceptive manner.
JU'GULAR, adjective [Latin jugulum, the neck, either from jugum, a yoke, or from its radical sense, to extend, to join. See Join.]Pertaining to the neck or throat; as the jugula...
JUICEJUICELESS, adjective ju'seless. Destitute of juice; dry; without moisture.
JUICINESS, noun ju'siness. The state of abounding with juice; succulence in plants.
JUICY, adjective ju'sy. Abounding with juice; moist; succulent.
JUISE, noun [Latin jus.] Judgment; justice.
JU'JUBJU'JUBE, noun [Latin zizyphum.] The name of a plant and of its fruit, which is pulpy and resembles a small plum. The plant is arranged under the genus Rhamnus. The fruit w...