词汇 | example_english_judge |
释义 | Examples of judgeThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Individual labeling reactions and hybridizations do not introduce significant variability, as judged from good correlations of replicate experiments. He evokes and judges many sorts and conditions of men, and the way in which they do laws, politics, eloquence, and philosophy. The case was prepared in secret by one of the judges, the trial was not open to the public, and there was no provisional liberty. The courts, that is, the officiality, judged all cases that came within the bishop's jurisdiction, together with any appeals to the metropolitan bishop. In fact, only those judged to have the former are usually referred for a psychiatric consultation. If the case required it, both parties swore that they would abide by the decision to be taken by two judges within twenty-four hours. From the passages on servants discussed above, the description of work can be judged one of the major concerns of the poem. We give the child two pencils of equal length side-by-side, and he correctly judges them to be the" same size". Therefore, ratios should be judged based on the absolute signal intensity of each gene. The best interest will be judged by the professional. Within it, ideally, one's audience and judges are solely one's colleagues who, again ideally, have, like oneself, a purely disinterested commitment to truth. Only the first is praiseworthy for the utilitarian, since praise is essentially itself an act to be judged as good or harmful. Their arguments have to be judged on their merits. In it we know ourselves to be rational agents detached from spontaneity, judging on objective grounds what will serve our ends. The pace at which new financial systems can be introduced needs to be carefully judged. On the other hand, the judges refrain from interfering with basic structures of the ' private sphere ' (especially as far as the gender hierarchy is concerned). Note, however, the sense in which the judge's decision is responsive to the par ticipation of the (losing) defendant as well. The authority of the judges will have to be propped up with myths and force. The judges are influenced by their upbringing, persona l prejudices, and all sorts of extralegal whatnot. A variation on approach (3) requires judges to resolve moral questions according to social morality. How do legal theorists understand what judges are doing? The role of judges seems much more important. Moreover, they must be sensitive to the success or failure of their subjects' actions so that compensator y action may be taken if judged appropriate. He argues that judges have a certain kind of shared intention that knits together their activities into a shared action. How, then, do the judges successfully form these sorts of intentions? If law is indeterminate, then judges are unconstrained by law in their decision-making. Others were created by judges who formulated them to decide particular cases, and thus established them as precedents for the future. On the contrar y, judges accept the same tr uth conditions for propositions of law. Subjects first judged the modulus item and then all the items in the training set. Then subjects were told that linguistic acceptability could be judged in the same way as line length. Such models may be judged successful if the defining criterion is that it describes the space of possible analyses that sentences may get. We needed a criterion for when a structure should be judged as acquired by the learner. Instead of legal principles tested and scrutinized by numerous judges in a variety of factual situations, law codes reflected the opinion of its drafter. There is no mention here of how reliably tools are judged to be symmetrical by researchers, nor the specific criteria for symmetry. They would seem to be judging their study species according to the anthropocentric standards that they reject. Similarly, the velocity of the effector used to intercept the target object will be judged relative to the visual environment in which it moves. The kangany could be judged according to civil law. In empirical studies, observer accuracy is usually judged by the degree to which the observer's rating matches the subject's rating of pain. Therefore, we need to satisfy two different sorts of criteria if our project is to be judged a success. With the third criterion, analogy, explanations are judged more coherent if they are supported by analogy to theories that scientists already find credible. The students learn from each other without having to be afraid of being judged for a wrong answer. Eighty-five per cent of the children judged the major version as happy and 80% judged the minor version as sad. The adequacy of exposure is often best judged retrospectively, when the children are older and demonstrate mastery of both languages. When the tone was matched for the pair, children judged the two syllable segments to be more similar. Two independent judges rated both types of tasks (main idea and retelling) for listening and reading. However, from 1684 onwards the commissaries (judges) kept registers of extracted decreets, and process papers were also kept in a more systematic fashion. Two patients had a large non-tapering duct of 9 mm diameter and were judged unsuitable for implantation. Both acts are judged to be in the best interests of the dying patient and the family. A linear tendency was observed, nonetheless, with the larger surgical dimensions also being judged larger at echo. Does the standard by which one judges what is good or better lie within one culture, or does it transcend all cultures? Cardiac enlargement as judged by chest x-ray (present in 92% of patients) was more sensitive than physical and electrocardiographic findings in the detection of effusions. We find the content of reviews invaluable in judging our success as authors. Three of them could be marked if the students judged the sentences to be correct. Participants judged whether a word referred to a living thing (an ' 'animate' ' entity) or to non-living thing (an ' 'inanimate' ' entity). The researcher and two professional speech therapists acted as the judges. Teaching effectiveness could also be judged by the pupils' improvement and their concert performance. If so, the concept could be very valuable when judging moral dilemmas. The products of each stimulus were presented in random order, and the judges were blind to the children's age and other products. Seventeen items that judges agreed to be highly diagnostic of maternal sensitivity were used to create this scale. Perhaps it becomes the view that what morality requires is for each person to act for the best, as judged from his or her position. Upon establishing reliability on a more informal basis, the judges independently rated the main set of deceased topic transcripts. You will be our judges, but ultimately we cannot achieve this without your support. All other reports of harm were judged to be nonconcurrent. Less common were conflicts between two attributes both judged to reflect true self-behavior (29% and 34%). The error variance was 4.29, which makes the probability about 1 in 40, so the hor mone effect must be judged significant. In the standard theory, too, a given action can be judged rational or irrational from a range of different perspectives. Bilingual judges verified the semantic similarity between the backtranslated items and the original items in the questionnaire. The individual faces a fixed logical frame and, for each proposition, judges it or chooses not to (if we relax completeness). In contrast, we are looking for a concrete method of judging feasibility, with some epistemic applicability. Instead, the moral relevance of factors is judged by their relation to human attitudes and collective or individual responsibility. Subjects favored a sine wave path over the parabolic trajectory, and generally all paths of some continuous curvature were judged to be fairly natural. Her subjects were asked to adopt one of two modes of response (or "attitudes," as she called them) towards judging size. As can be judged from figure 20, the momentum thickness is not affected by the addition of excitation. English-speaking judges verified the semantic similarity between the backtranslated items and the original items in the questionnaire. Such assessments will be made accurately only when judged in the short axis, as described above for the truncal valve. If the selection process itself is inherently political, so too are the decisions judges hand down once they get to the bench. They wanted little more than to be judged on merit, to exercise citizenship rights and to win social acceptance within white middle-class society. Once or twice during the course of the entire session a majority of the children produced speech that might be judged as self-reinforcing. Any student of systems analysis knows that maintainability is an impor tant criterion for judging the success of a computer system. There is no theoretical way to find an appropriate threshold value for judging whether multicollinearity is high. The responses of other interviewees corroborated the claim that judges tend to follow the therapeutic recommendations. Unlike private lawyers, who are not directly guided by the state's logic, judges are part of the political and bureaucratic meta-field. In this context, the difference in perspective between lawyers and judges is noteworthy. A foremost explanation for judges' readiness to request and adopt therapeutic recommendations is the predominance of the 'best interest of the child' criterion, discussed earlier. During the test phase they were free to reassert this assumption and consequently selected or judged incorrectly. In a comparison condition, the functions that were demonstrated were judged to be implausible in this way. Behavioural directives and conversation-eliciting utterances were identified and coded by two independent judges. Although seven-year-olds demonstrated a beginning understanding of the obligation condition, they too relied on the outcome when judging whether an utterance was a promise. All those test stimuli judged to resemble the standard are interpreted as members of a given category. We chose teachers as judges because they are familiar with the task of judging pupils' expressions. Listeners who are to serve as judges of tape-recorded utterances appear to need very little definitional training or experience with recorded examples. He agreed that green for him must be 'toned down', judging by what other people said of the greens he uses. Five (13 %) were qualitatively judged as convex but fitted with a non-convex regression line, or vice versa. Table 3 reports the salience that each party was judged by the experts to attach to each of the ten substantive policy dimensions. One observer concluded that there were really only two general rules for judges to follow in zoning cases. Where judges thought an aesthetic purpose was part of a well-reasoned regulatory classification, they could usually find a way to let it slip through. Since physicians judged the health of patients by the patients' own accounts of their illnesses, the two parties inevitably began to share a common vocabulary. Indeed, the judges seemed to value a certain amount of disorder as a means of judging the dogs. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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