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adjudge
[ uh-juhj ]
verb (used with object)
- to declare or pronounce formally; decree:
The will was adjudged void.
- to award or assign judicially:
The prize was adjudged to him.
- to decide by a judicial opinion or sentence:
to adjudge a case.
- to sentence or condemn:
He was adjudged to die.
- to deem; consider; think:
It was adjudged wise to avoid war.
adjudge
/ əˈ»åÏôÊŒ»åÏô /
verb
- to pronounce formally; declare
he was adjudged the winner
- to determine judicially; judge
- to order or pronounce by law; decree
he was adjudged bankrupt
- to award (costs, damages, etc)
- archaic.to sentence or condemn
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ³Ü²Ôa»å·Âá³Ü»å²µ±ð»å adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of adjudge1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of adjudge1
Example Sentences
Thomas Ramos reduced the deficit from the tee before Sale were millimetres short of a third try as Tom Roebuck was adjudged to have been in touch before diving over.
The Times, taking the opposite line, reported that Glenn and another student, Brendon Barr, were adjudged “incorrigible†and clocked in a stockade as a last resort.
Although Verstappen stayed on the track, he was adjudged to have forced Norris off the track and was given his first penalty.
The class had cobbled together a homemade Tesla coil, and wireless messages were sent from the basement to the school auditorium by students who, The Times adjudged, could “handle juice most familiarly.â€
Meg Jones is adjudged to have knocked the ball forwards before Jess Breach got over so the try is chalked off.
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