judgement造句91. It's not for me to pass judgement on your behaviour.
92. He may call me what names he wishes to use.I don't care a pin for his judgement.
93. I have used my interviews with parents as a counterpoint to a professional judgement.
94. It is my duty to pronounce judgement against that corrupted leader.
95. I felt completely unable to come to any judgement about it at all.
96. He felt he had no right to sit in judgement on someone he had only just met.
97. The company backed her judgement and implemented all her recommendations.
98. The ratings were based on the subjective judgement of one person.
99. Try to be aware of external factors which may unduly influence your judgement.
100. It was, in her judgement, the wrong thing to do.
101. It's difficult to form a judgement when you don't have all the facts.
102. Doctors are reserving judgement on his ability to travel until later in the week.
103. I'd like to reserve judgement until I see the report.
104. He trusted her judgement.
105. This failure is a judgement on you for being so lazy.
106. You have no right to sit in judgement on her—you'd probably have done exactly the same thing if you'd been in her position.
107. I'd prefer to reserve judgement until I know all the facts.
108. The decision to expand the company was an error of judgement.
109. Accepting the gift was an error of judgement on the part of the party chairman.
110. I mistrust his judgement.
111. We must wait to hear his evidence before we make any judgement.
112. The speaker showed good judgement in his choice of topic.
113. In my position, I can't afford to let my judgement be coloured by personal feelings.
114. He argues very strongly that none of us has the right to sit in judgement.
115. You will need to exercise your own judgement about what clothes to wear.
116. Applications for summary judgement are by no means unusual.
117. In 1945 the superficial judgement invariably carried the day.
118. Many recent evaluation studies do include a judgement element.
119. You are inclined to agree with their judgement.
120. Faith is the commitment of one's consciousness to beliefs for which one has no sensory evidence or rational proof. When man rejects reason as his standard of judgement, only one alternative standard remains to him: his feelings. A mystic is a man who treats his feelings as tools of cognition. Faith is the equation of feelings with knowledge.Nathaniel Branden