Dictionary Definition
judge
Noun
1 a public official authorized to decide
questions bought before a court of justice [syn: justice, jurist, magistrate]
2 an authority who is able to estimate worth or
quality [syn: evaluator]
Verb
1 determine the result of (a competition)
2 form an opinion of or pass judgment on; "I
cannot judge some works of modern art"
3 judge tentatively or form an estimate of
(quantities or time); "I estimate this chicken to weigh three
pounds" [syn: estimate,
gauge, approximate, guess]
5 put on trial or hear a case and sit as the
judge at the trial of; "The football star was tried for the murder
of his wife"; "The judge tried both father and son in separate
trials" [syn: adjudicate, try]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From juge, juger, ultimately from judicare, judicem, from jus + dicus.Pronunciation
- /dʒʌdʒ/, /dZVdZ/,
- Rhymes with: -ʌdʒ
Noun
- A public official whose duty it is to administer the law, especially by presiding over trials and rendering judgments; a justice.
- A person who decides the fate of someone or something that has been called into question.
- A person officiating at a sports or similar event.
- At a boxing match the decision of the judges is final.
- A person whose opinion on a subject is respected.
- He is a good judge of wine.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
public judicial official
- Bosnian: sudija
- Catalan: jutge
- Chinese: (fǎ guān)
- Croatian: sudac
- Czech: soudce
- Dutch: rechter
- Finnish: tuomari
- French: juge
- German: Richter, Richterin i female
- Greek:
- Hungarian: bíró
- Italian: giudice
- Latin: iudex
- Malay: hakim
- Portuguese: juiz, juíza
- Russian: судья (sud’já) m|f
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: судија
- Roman: sudija
- Cyrillic: судија
- Slovene: sodnik , sodnica
- Spanish: juez
someone deciding another’s fate
sports official
- Bosnian: sudija
- Catalan: àrbitre
- Croatian: sudac
- Dutch: scheidsrechter
- Finnish: tuomari
- French: arbitre
- German: Schiedsrichter, Schiedsrichterin i female
- Greek: κριτής
- Italian: giudice, arbitro
- Portuguese: juiz, juíza
- Russian: судья (sud’já) m|f
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: судија
- Roman: sudija
- Cyrillic: судија
- Slovene: sodnik , sodnica
- Spanish: árbitro
someone with valued opinions
- Dutch: kenner, beoordelaar
- Finnish: tuntija, asiantuntija
- Greek: γνώστης
- Italian: intenditore
- Latin: existimator
- Portuguese: julgador, julgadora
- Russian: судья (sud’já) m|f
Verb
- To sit in judgment
on; to pass sentence on.
- A higher power will judge you after you are dead.
- To sit in judgment, to act as judge.
- Justices in this country judge without appeal.
- To form an opinion on.
- I judge a man’s character by the cut of his suit.
- To arbitrate; to
pass opinion on
something, especially to settle a dispute etc.
- We cannot both be right: you must judge between us.
- To have as an opinion; to consider, suppose.
- I judge it safe to leave the house once again.
- To form an opinion; to infer.
- I judge from the sky that it might rain later.
- The act of criticizing or labeling another person or thing.
Related terms
Translations
sit in judgment on, pass sentence on
sit in judgment on, act as judge
- Ancient Greek: κρίνω (krinō)
- Bosnian: suditi
- Catalan: jutjar
- Croatian: suditi
- Czech: soudit
- Dutch: oordelen, rechtspreken
- French: juger
- German: urteilen, eine Verhandlung führen
- Hungarian: ítélkezik
- Portuguese: julgar
- Russian: судить (sudít')
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic:
судити
- Roman: suditi
- Cyrillic:
судити
- Slovene: soditi
- Spanish: juzgar
form an opinion on
- Ancient Greek: κρίνω (krinō)
- Dutch: beoordelen
- French: juger
- German: beurteilen, einschätzen
- Hungarian: megítél
- Portuguese: julgar
- Russian: судить (sudít')
- Slovene: soditi
arbitrate, to pass opinion on something
- Ancient Greek: κρίνω (krinō)
- Dutch: oordelen, bemiddelen
- French: juger
- German: Schiedsrichter sein
- Hungarian: dönt
- Portuguese: julgar
- Russian: рассудить (rassudít')
- Slovene: razsoditi
have as an opinion, consider, suppose
- Dutch: oordelen, achten, houden voor
- German: einschätzen als
form an opinion, infer
- Dutch: oordelen, afleiden, schatten
- German: schätzen
- Hungarian: következtet
act of criticizing or labeling another person or
thing
- Dutch: beoordelen, veroordelen
- German: verurteilen
- Hungarian: ítél
Extensive Definition
A judge or justice is an official who presides over a
court. The powers,
functions, method of appointment, discipline, and training of
judges vary widely across different jurisdictions.
Judges in legal system
There are significant differences between the
role of a judge in the common law
system descended from British practice, and civil
law systems descended from continental European judicial
practice. The descriptions below are necessarily archetypical.
Details vary from judicial system to judicial system. In many
cases, the judicial systems have experienced convergent evolution,
expressly or unconsciously adopting similar practices or operating
in a manner that minimizes the impact of formal differences between
the archetypical role of each system's judges.
For example, while common law judicial procedure
generally contemplates a single evidentiary
trial, many cases are actually resolved through testimony taken
from witnesses in isolated depositions prior to trial that support
written presentations to a judge. Similarly, while civil law judges
must have some statutory point of departure for their legal
rulings, there are accepted methods of legal reasoning that often
afford them greater latitude to fit the law to the circumstances of
an unusual case than a stark statement of the underlying principles
of the system would suggest. This can serve a purpose similar to
the common law method of legal reasoning known as stare
decisis.
Judges in common law legal systems
In common law countries, judges usually operate
under the adversarial system of justice. At the trial level a
single judge usually presides over court proceedings (there are
some narrow exceptions).
Professional background
Common law judges are generally appointed or
elected after careers as practicing attorneys, although many
receive brief educational programs specific to judging once taking
the bench. Judges are frequently drawn from the ranks of barristers, as opposed to
solicitors, where a
distinction is made between the two as separate legal
professions.
Many U.S. states permit non-lawyers to serve as
justices of the peace or as inferior jurisdiction judges in rural
areas, but this practice is generally limited to less serious
criminal offenses and small claims. Federal judges are not required
by law to be attorneys, but it has been long established that the
President traditionally appoints only attorneys to the federal
bench.
Judges and juries
In the common law
system, when there is a jury trial in the trial courts, the jury
generally decides questions of fact (guilty or
not
guilty, whether a party was
negligent, etc.)
while a single judge decides questions of law (under common-law
systems, one of the judge's most important powers is to craft jury
instructions).
In a trial before a judge, sometimes called a
"bench trial", a single judge decides issues of both law and fact.
Outside the United States, only a very narrow category of civil
cases are tried before juries and usually criminal cases are tried
before juries only in more serious cases. In the United States,
cases where a jury is not available are the exception, rather than
the norm, even in relatively minor civil and criminal matters. In
United States practice, the right to a jury usually hinges on
historical distinctions made between law and equity in
England prior to the adoption of the United
States Constitution.
Because both civil and
criminal
procedure in common law systems developed in the context of a
system where the ultimate decisions were usually deferred to a
jury (even though this is
often not the case outside the United States in civil cases),
common law judges are limited in their power to resolve matters
prior to a full trial, even if they have all information that they
feel they need to resolve a case involving disputed facts.
Historically, in Europe in the
Middle
Ages, juries often stated the law by consensus or majority and
the judge applied it to the facts as he saw them. This practice no
longer exists. The power of juries to determine the law in a manner
contrary to that dictated by the trial judge, or even ignore the
law (which is often called jury
nullification), has been controversial in American
jurisprudence from very early on in American history. Generally
speaking, current practice in U.S. law is to formally deny that
such a power exists. But, U.S. law also maintains procedural
protections such as a prohibiting testimony regarding jury
deliberations, and disallowing government appeals of acquittals by
juries in criminal cases, that have the practical effect of making
it possible for juries to make their own determinations of
law.
U.S. legal practice also has an institution
called a grand jury
which is presided over on a day to day basis by a prosecutor,
rather than a judge, although it is ultimately under the
supervision of a judge. This institution investigates crimes via
the subpoena power and screens serious criminal charges to
determine if a prosecution is justified.
Appellate judges
In common law practice, appeals are usually decided by a
panel of judges, generally three appellate judges chosen at random
in an intermediate appellate
court, and the entire composition of the court in the relevant
highest appellate court in the jurisdiction. However, decisions
made by a subordinate or inferior jurisdiction judge are sometimes
reviewed by a single judge.
Judges in civil law systems
In most civil law jurisdictions with inquisitorial systems, judges go to special schools to be trained after graduating with a law degree from a university; after such training they often become investigating magistrates. However, the inquisitorial system is not used in all civil law jurisdictions; it is primarily in use in countries of Southern Europe that were influenced by Napoleon's Code Napoleon, such as France, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. In Northern Europe, the adversarial system is predominant in criminal matters. Nevertheless, judges in both Northern and Southern Continental Europe generally do not have backgrounds as practicing attorneys (or advocates), even though they are legally trained.In the civil law system, serious matters are
almost always decided at the trial level by at least three judges,
and sometimes more, often in combination with lay persons in
serious criminal manners, although one of those judges may take the
lead in gathering evidence in a case. In civil law systems
typically only the equivalent of U.S. small
claims and misdemeanors are handled by
a single trial judge.
For example, in Finland and
Sweden,
there are two kinds of judges in district courts: a legally-trained
judge functions as the president of the court, while judges elected
for a four-year term from the population, without any special legal
training, serve as lay members of the court. In Sweden, the same is
true for the appellate courts. Lay judges do not function like a
common-law jury. In the usual case, three lay judges in district
courts hear criminal cases in cooperation with a legally trained
judge, each judge – legally trained or not –
having an individual vote. However, in some jurisdictions, criminal
cases in severe matters, such as homicide, require a trial by
jury, where the jury decides upon the issue of mens rea. Issues
of law – and also the assessment of what has factually
been proven to have taken place – is the responsility of
the judge, who guides the jury by means of a jury
instruction. Civil cases, however, are heard exclusively by
legally trained judges.
In civil law practice, appeals are usually heard
and decided by a panel of multiple judges. State courts can be
called district courts. The highest appellate court in a civil law
jurisdiction (often translated as "supreme court" in English), is
typically organized more like an intermediate appellate court in
common law practice; decisions are made by a panel of judges that
does not include all judges sitting on the court. Another key
difference is that, judges are typically assigned to hear appeals
in the highest appellate court based on specialization in a
particular type of law, rather than at random. In civil law
systems, the only appellate court of last resort in which all
members of the court sit together to hear a case is the constitutional
court (if one exists).
Non-judges with judicial power
Certain non-judges are vested with judicial power
by virtue of their political or religious office, or their position
as a responsible government employee.
In Japan, police
officers can order punishments for minor offenses without approval
from a judge. A similar system operates in England and Wales: the
Penalty Notice for Disorder (known, colloquially, as a "fixed
ticket") is a police-imposed fine for such minor offences as
shop-theft for values under £200 and disorderly behaviour.
A number of jurisdictions give mayors of municipalities
judicial authority similar to a justice of the peace, also known as
a judge of the peace, or magistrate. Many courts with probate
jurisdiction give court clerks quasi-judicial authority as
"registrars" of the court. Members of county commissions and city
councils in the United States often have quasi-judicial authority
in zoning matters. And,
legislators sometimes sit in a judicial capacity, such as when they
rule on impeachment
charges of governmental officials, and in the United
Kingdom, when law lords, who are officially members of the
House of
Lords, a primarily legislative body, hear appeals in legal
cases.
Historically, in the United Kingdom, certain
matters, such as annulments of marriages and division of personal
property of deceased persons, were the responsibility of ecclesiastical
courts, in which clergy presided. Many countries, such as
Israel and
Pakistan
and Iran,
continue to have religious courts, particularly in matters of
family
law, that operate in addition to their ordinary courts with
full authority to enter legally binding decisions. Other countries,
such as Afghanistan
under its newly adopted constitution, have a unitary court system
in which some judges have primarily secular training, while others
judges have primarily religious training."People will be treated
equally and they will be punished equally does not matter the race
or the religion.", said famous judge Magill
Often parties in contractual relationships with
each other enter into "arbitration agreements"
which vests quasi-judicial authority to resolve disputes between
the parties in a non-judge chosen by mutually agreed means.
Sometimes these persons are legally trained, and sometimes they are
not, but have some relevant subject matter expertise. Civil justice
in the Roman
Empire, which provided some of the foundational doctrines for
Western systems often handled civil disputes through an
arbitration-like mechanism. Courts can typically be called upon to
enforce a final decision rendered by an arbitrator pursuant to an
arbitration agreement if necessary.
Power of judges
In common law
countries, such as the United States, and those with roots in the
Commonwealth
of Nations, judges have a number of powers which are not known
to exist, or are not acknowledged to exist, in civil
law legal systems, which collectively make the judiciary a more
powerful political force than in civil law countries.
One of these powers is the "contempt
of court" power. In a common law system, a judge typically has
the power to summarily punish with a fine or imprisonment any misconduct
which takes place in the courtroom, and to similarly
punish violations of the court's
orders, after a hearing, when they take place outside the
courtroom. This power, in turn, may be used by common law judges to
enforce orders for injunctive
relief, which is a court order to take or refrain from taking
some particular act, directed at the individual who must do so.
This power is a vestige of authority that members of the nobility had when they
personally presided over disputes between their subjects. It has
the effect of giving common law country judges great power to
fashion remedies, such as school desegregation orders and
restraining orders directed at individuals. Civil law judges, in
contrast, outside of specialized courts with narrowly delineated
powers, generally lack contempt power or the power to impose
injunctive relief.
Another power of every judge in the United
States, generally right down to the level of the magistrate, is the
power to declare a law unconstitutional and invalid, at least as
applied in a particular case. In contrast, most civil law countries
limit this power to a special constitutional court, and all other
judges are required to follow the enacted laws, even if the judge
personally believes those laws to be unconstitutional, in the
absence of an order from the constitutional court. However, if a
person believes that a law applied against them in court is
unconstitutional, they can apply for consideration in the
constitutional court and, if the law is indeed declared
unconstitutional, file an appeal against the ruling based on the
now-invalidated law.
Similarly, in the common law system, cases in
which the government administration is at issue, known as public law
cases, for example, suits claiming violations of civil rights by
government officials, are often heard by the same judges who handle
criminal cases and disputes between private individuals. In
contrast, in civil law countries, only designated judges or
quasi-judges (such as the Conseil
d'État in France) can hear
public law cases, and ordinary judges can hear only criminal cases
and cases involving private parties.
Judges in a common law system are also empowered,
and for the most part required, to make law guided by past
precedent, or to choose to ignore past precedent as no longer
applicable, based on a concept known as "stare
decisis" ("to stand by what has been decided"), in cases where
no statute or prior case clearly mandates a particular result, and
in cases where past precedents, for some reason, no longer appear
to provide firm guidance as to the current state of the law. For
example, in a case of "first impression" which has never arisen in
a publicly reported case in a state, a judge must choose which rule
will apply, usually informed by decisions which have been made in
similar cases in other jurisdictions and based on the public
policies involved. Judges in civil law systems, in contrast, are
strictly forbidden from "making law" and, as a general rule, are
not bound by or even encouraged to refer to precedents established
in prior similar cases.
Civil law judges, likewise, have some powers not
usually held by common law judges. Most importantly, a common law
judge is usually required to base a decision almost exclusively on
the evidence provided by the parties to a case during the course of
a trial, or a hearing, or in documents filed with the court. In
contrast, a civil law judge frequently has the authority to
investigate the facts of a case independently of evidence provided
by the parties to that case, in what is known as an "inquisitorial"
role.
All judges must sign a judicial
oath which is a fiduciary undertaking or a
promise of duty of care. Yet the moment it is signed, the judge is
protected with judicial
immunity which prevents anyone from testing the obligation the
judge undertook in the oath. Arguments against the judicial
immunity say this law is allowing judges a special method of escape
for claims for breach of fiduciary
duty which is something no other fiduciary apart from politicians can
obtain.
Oversight of judges
Federal judges in the United States (except those
who have recess appointments) serve life terms for their period of
"good behavior." Once appointed, state judges in the United States
usually serve terms for a fixed period of years, although in some
states (e.g., Massachusetts) the appointment is for life, often
subject to mandatory retirement at some fixed age. In those states
where the appointment is not for life, judges must, after their
initial term, be re-elected, face a retention election, or face
reappointment by an appropriate authority. The law governing
judicial elections in the United States is in flux with the general
tendency being to discard historical limitations on the ability of
a judge to campaign based upon judicial philosophy.
Most judicial systems in the United States have
procedures for investigating breaches of judicial ethics and
disability. Lapses of judicial ethics include matters such as
taking bribes, open defiance of a binding court order, ruling upon
a case in which the judge has a personal interest, failure to
account for court funds, failure to conduct court proceedings with
a suitably judicial demeanor, harassment of judicial employees or a
judge's conviction of a serious offense unrelated to judicial
service. Disability complaints often involve allegations that a
judge is beginning to show symptoms of alcoholism, dementia or an
inability to stay awake.
Complaints about a judge's judicial ethics or
disability may ordinarily not contest the merits of the
determination made by the judge, which can only be contested in the
appellate process. Judges in the United States generally have
absolute immunity for personal liability in the form of money
damages for their discretionary judicial acts.
Almost every state and the federal government
provides the legislature with the authority to remove a judge for
cause in a quasi-judicial impeachment proceeding in which the
legislative body hears evidence and renders a super-majority
verdict limited to removal from office. Often the standard is "high
crimes and misdemeanors" or failure to engage in "good behavior"
while in office.
Many state judicial systems also have either a
special commission or board charged with investigating alleged
lapses of judicial ethics or disability, or vest that power in
their highest court, usually a state supreme court. Such
determinations may be appealed to the Supreme Court of the United
States only to the extent that they involve the final decision of a
state court system and pose a federal law question.
Some violations of judicial ethics, such as
taking bribes or converting public funds, are also federal or state
crimes investigated and prosecuted by the appropriate
prosecutor.
In the federal system, there is no outside
grievance body with the authority to discipline a U.S. Supreme
Court justice. The U.S. Supreme Court has supervisory authority
over the entire federal judiciary, in addition to its appellate
responsibilities, and it has used this authority to establish
certain procedures for investigating and addressing lapses of
judicial ethics by federal judges.
In Canada, Justices (Justices
of Peace) are appointed provincially to preside over minor
cases, while Judges are appointed federally. Neither can be removed
from office until they reached the retirement age of 65, 70 or 75
(depending on the type of appointment) unless they are found to
have been in serious misconduct, in which case, the
House of Commons and Senate
(federally appointed) or the Judicial Council (provincially
appointed) can pass a motion to remove a judge/justice from office.
http://www.justice.gc.ca/en/dept/pub/trib/page4.html
Symbols of office
Being a judge is usually a prestigious and solemn position in society. A variety of traditions have become associated with the occupation.In many parts of the world, judges wear long
robes (usually in black or red) and sit on an elevated platform
during trials (known as the bench).
In some countries, especially in the Commonwealth
of Nations, judges sometimes wear wigs. The long
wig often associated with judges is now reserved for ceremonial
occasions, although it was part of the standard attire in previous
centuries. A short wig resembling but not identical to a barrister's wig would be worn
in court. This tradition, however, is being phased out in Britain
in non-criminal courts.
American judges frequently wear black robes.
American judges have ceremonial gavels, although American judges
have court deputies or bailiffs and "contempt
of court" power as their main devices to maintain decorum in
the courtroom. However, in some Western
states, like California,
judges did not always wear robes and instead wore everyday
clothing. Today, some members of state
supreme courts, such as the
Maryland Court of Appeals wear distinct dress.
In the
People's Republic of China, judges wore regular street clothes
until 1984, when they began to wear military-style
uniforms, which were intended to demonstrate authority. These
uniforms were replaced in 2000 by black robes similar to those worn
in the rest of the world.
In Oman, the judge wears
a long stripe (Red, Green and White), while the attorneys wear the
black gown.
Titles
In the United States, a judge is addressed as "Your Honor" or "Judge" when presiding over the court. The judges of the Supreme Court of the United States, and the judges of the supreme courts of several U.S. states and other countries are called "justices" or "judges of the peace".The justices of the supreme courts usually hold
higher offices than the justice
of the peace, a judge who holds police court
in some jurisdictions and who
typically tries small
claims and misdemeanors. However, the
state of New
York inverts the usual order, with the Supreme Court of the
State of New York being the most important trial court, and the
Court of Appeals being the highest court; thus, New York trial
judges are called "justices", while the judges on the Court of
Appeals are "judges". New York judges who deal with guardianships,
trusts and estates are known as "surrogates".
A senior
judge, in U.S. practice, is a retired judge who handles
selected cases for a governmental entity while in retirement, on a
part-time
basis.
Subordinate or inferior jurisdiction judges in
U.S. legal practice are sometimes called magistrates, although in the
federal court of the United States, they are called "magistrate
judges". Subordinate judges in U.S. legal practice appointed on a
case-by-case basis, particularly in cases where a great deal of
detailed and tedious evidence must be reviewed, are often called
"masters" or "special masters" and have authority in a particular
case often determined on a case by case basis.
Judges of courts of specialized jurisdiction
(such as bankruptcy
courts or juvenile
courts) were sometimes known officially as "referees," but the use of this
title is in decline. Judges sitting in courts of equity in common law
systems (such as judges in the equity courts of the U.S. State of
Delaware)
are called "Chancellors".
Individuals with judicial responsibilities who
report to an executive branch official, rather than being a part of
the judiciary, are often called "administrative
law judges" in U.S. practice and commonly make initial
determinations regarding matters such as eligibility for government
benefits, regulatory matters, and immigration determinations.
Judges who derive their authority from a
contractual agreement of the parties to a dispute, rather than a
governmental body are called arbitrators, and typically do
not receive the honorific forms of address, and do not have the
symbolic trappings, of a publicly appointed judge.
In England
and Wales (and much of the Commonwealth)
judges of the higher courts are addressed as "My Lord" or "My Lady"
and referred to as "Your Lordship" or "Your Ladyship". Circuit
Judges are addressed as "Your Honour" and all lower judges,
magistrates, and chairs of tribunals are addressed as "Your
Worship" or "Sir/Madam". Magistrates are still addressed as "Your
Worship" in Britain, Australia, South Africa and Canada, mainly by
solicitors, but this
practice in other Commonwealth countries is nearly obsolete.
Masters of the High Court are addressed as "Master". When a judge
of the High Court who is not present is being referred to they are
described as "Mr./Mrs. Justice N" (written N J). In the House of
Lords, judges are called Law Lords and
sit as peers.
In France, the
presiding judge of a court is addressed to as "Mr./Mrs. President"
(Monsieur le président/Madame le président), in Germany as
"Mr./Mrs. Chairman (Herr
Vorsitzender/Frau Vorsitzende).
Biblical Judges
The Biblical Book of
Judges revolves around a succession of leaders who were known
as "Judges" (Hebrew shoftim
שופטים) but who - aside from their judicial function - were also
tribal war leaders, leading in war against threatening enemies. The
same word is, however, used in contemporary Israel to denote
judges whose function and authority is similar to that in other
modern countries.
References
See also
External links
Europe M.E.D.E.L
European association of judges and public prosecutors.
judge in Catalan: Jutge
judge in Czech: Soudce
judge in Danish: Dommer
judge in German: Richter
judge in Spanish: Juez
judge in Esperanto: Juĝisto
judge in French: Juge
judge in Western Frisian: Rjochter
judge in Galician: Xuíz
judge in Korean: 판사
judge in Indonesian: Juri
judge in Italian: Giudice
judge in Hebrew: שופט
judge in Latin: Iudex
judge in Lithuanian: Teisėjas
judge in Hungarian: Bíró
(igazságszolgáltatás)
judge in Dutch: Rechter
judge in Japanese: 裁判官
judge in Norwegian: Dommer
judge in Occitan (post 1500): Jutge
judge in Polish: Sędzia
judge in Portuguese: Juiz
judge in Quechua: Taripakuq
judge in Simple English: Judge
judge in Slovenian: Sodnik
judge in Swedish: Domare
judge in Ukrainian: Суддя
judge in Urdu: جج
judge in Yiddish: דיין
judge in Chinese: 法官
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
account, account as, act
between, adjudge,
adjudicate, adjudicator, administer, administer
justice, administrate, allow, amateur, appraise, appraiser, appreciate, approximate, arbiter, arbiter elegantiarum,
arbiter of taste, arbitrate, arbitrator, assess, assume, authority, bargain, be afraid, be
judicious, beak, believe, bon vivant, call, charge the jury, check, cognoscente, collect, collector, conceive, conciliator, conclude, conduct a trial,
conjecture, connaisseur, connoisseur, consider, count, court, critic, daresay, decide, decree, deduce, deduct, deem, deemster, demonstrate, dempster, derive, determine, dilettante, draw, epicure, epicurean, esteem, estimate, evaluate, evaluator, exercise judgment,
expect, expert, express an opinion,
fancy, find, form an opinion, gather, go between, good judge,
gourmand, gourmet, guess, have a hunch, have an idea,
have an impression, have an inkling, have the idea, hear, hold, hold as, imagine, impartial arbitrator,
infer, intercede, intermediary, intermediate, interpose, intervene, judger, judicator, jurist, justice, look upon as, magistrate, maintain, make, make out, make terms,
maven, measure, mediate, mediator, meet halfway,
moderate, moderator, negotiate, negotiator, opine, pass sentence, peacemaker, pine, place, preside, presume, pronounce sentence,
prove, put, rate, reckon, reconciler, referee, refined palate,
regard, represent, review, reviewer, rule, set down as, settle, show, sit in judgment, size up,
step in, suppose,
surmise, suspect, take, take for, take it, test, think, think of, third party,
treat with, trow, try, try a case, umpire, unbiased observer,
value, view as, virtuoso, ween, weigh