judgment - significado y definición. Qué es judgment
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Qué (quién) es judgment - definición

EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE TO MAKE A CONSIDERED DECISION
Judging; Judgments; Judged; Judgment; Human judgement; Human judgment

judgment         
n.
1.
Discernment, understanding, intelligence, discrimination, taste, sagacity, penetration, wisdom, brains, prudence, ballast, depth, sense, mother-wit, quick parts, common-sense, good sense, long head.
2.
Determination, decision, conclusion, opinion, notion, estimate.
3.
(Law.) Sentence, award, decree.
4.
(Psychol.) Power of judgment, intellect, faculty of comparison or synthesis, unitive faculty, faculty of thought.
5.
(Log.) Sentence, proposition.
judgment         
n.
also: judgement
1) to display, exercise, show judgment (she always exercises good judgment)
2) to form, make a judgment
3) to hand down, pass, pronounce, render judgment on
4) to sit in judgment on
5) to reserve judgment
6) good; impaired; poor; sober; sound judgment (to display poor judgment)
7) a value judgment
8) a judgment against; for
9) a judgment that + clause (I repeat my judgment that he was to blame) 10, in smb.'s judgment (in my judgment, she is not guilty)
judgment         
n. the final decision by a court in a lawsuit, criminal prosecution or appeal from a lower court's judgment, except for an "interlocutory judgment," which is tentative until a final judgment is made. The word "decree" is sometimes used as synonymous with judgment. See also: decree

Wikipedia

Judgement

Judgement (or the American spelling judgment) is also known as adjudication, which means the evaluation of evidence to make a decision. Judgement is also the ability to make considered decisions. The term has at least five distinct uses. Aristotle suggested we think of the opposite of different uses of a term, if one exists, to help determine if the uses are really different. Some opposites will be included here to help demonstrate that their uses are really distinct:

  • Informal – opinions expressed as facts.
  • Informal and psychological – used in reference to the quality of cognitive faculties and adjudicational capabilities of particular individuals, typically called wisdom or discernment. The opposites are foolishness or indiscretion.
  • Formal - the mental act of affirming or denying one thing of another through comparison. Judgements are communicated to others using agreed-upon terms in the form of words or algebraic symbols as meanings to form propositions relating the terms, and whose further asserted meanings "of relation" are interpreted by those trying to understand the judgement.
  • Legal – used in the context of legal trial, to refer to a final finding, statement, or ruling, based on a considered weighing of evidence, called, "adjudication". Opposites could be suspension or deferment of adjudication. See Judgment (law)#Spelling for further explanation.

Additionally, judgement can mean:

  • Personality judgment, a psychological phenomenon of a person forming opinions of other people.
Ejemplos de uso de judgment
1. I‘m appealing on the judgment being made public, not on the judgment, I‘m very very happy with the judgment.
2. We‘re substituting our judgment for your judgment 16 blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue in the White House.
3. We are substituting the judgment of this Congress for your failed judgment.
4. "It shows lack of judgment." Her judgment was seen as her strong point.
5. He says that shows he has "judgment we can trust," while Clinton‘s judgment is flawed despite her experience in Washington.