She continued, indeed, rather too fond of all the tittle-tattle of the town; but then she thought of her own weakness, and judged more charitably that of others.
There was a light in the window, and, from the reflection of a man's figure on the wall, I judged he was at home.
Of course they didn't find it, any more than I had, and I felt sure they would go back and make it hot for Gaines, and I judgedthat he would probably try to gain time in some way.
He never knew another thing until he came to, after what must have been a number of days, to find himself a prisoner in a house he judged to be somewhere in New York.
They who sin without law, are to be judged without law; and they who sin in the law, are to be judgedby the law.
We have judged it best, that my niece should be married from this house, of which I hope you will approve.
Her coming there was the most unfortunate, the most ill-judged thing in the world!
Her arms alone yielded: and he judged from the angle of the neck, ultra-sharp though it was, that her averted face might be her form of exhibiting maidenly reluctance, feminine modesty.
Then she judged Emilia by human nature's hardest standard: the measure of the qualities brought as usurper and successor.
Perhaps he expected too much, or perhaps he judged too much by small and really insignificant signs.
Claudius judged the statement to be strictly true.
I judged however that the horses would take us to the river, so let them go their own way.
Suppose this process constitutes by far the larger part of their work, and that they are continually judged from the standpoint of what they are able to take in in a study hour and reproduce in a recitation hour.
The child ought to have the same motives for right doing and to be judged by the same standards in the school, as the adult in the wider social life to which he belongs.
These regulations, judged from the standpoint of the development of the child at the time, are more or less conventional and arbitrary.
Children are judged with reference to their capacity to realize the same external standard.
Its value as a moral agent may be judged from the statements of the Superintendent that some of the children "cried at the sight of a washtub," as if it were some new and hideous instrument of torture for their oppression.
While her friends thus charitably judged her, Lucia was, in truth, painfully and anxiously occupied by the illness of her mother.
But the Twentieth has been judgedalready by the conscience of the people.
Where that is found "every man will be judged according to what he hath, and not according to what he hath not[30].
It is therefore judgedmost expedient to act, as prudent generals are used to do, when they raze the fortress, or spike up the cannon, which are likely to fall into the hands of an enemy.
I had no personal acquaintance with any of you, but judged that one out of the three might serve my purpose, and therefore invited you all here.
But, since she asked me to visit her, we judged she had softened and might wish to become friendly, and so I accepted the invitation.
But Beth erroneously judged that the aged and infirm love sober and scholarly books, and picked out a treatise that proved ineffably dull and tedious.
The Queen did not mean to recommend in her letter of the 10th on this subject any active interference, as she is of opinion that our present want of due influence in Italy is chiefly owing to our former ill-judged over-activity.
We judged that there would be great difficulty in releasing him, but after feeling about in all directions round him, we determined to make the attempt.
Rough as they looked, by far the greater number, I judged by the tone of their voices, belong to the educated classes.
He had judged wisely, as it proved, and knew that he was out-distancing the enemy aircraft tearing in hot pursuit--all but one persistent Fokker that evidently meant business.
As soon as he judged himself to be out of danger he skulked among the trees for more than an hour.
It was the subjugation that John Adams judged was symbolized by the military rule of 1768.
About five removes from this, I judged that the space I was looking at must be about ten feet square.
Some one has said that talent should be judged at its best and character at its worst; but this is a phrase which does not help us to form a true estimate of Frontenac.
Judged by this standard Frontenac deserves great praise, for he never lacked capable and loyal lieutenants.
An act must be judged as a whole, by its conception, its execution, and its result.
One was of Barcelona make, the other an old suit which we judged had come from Damascus.
She judged all men by the standard that she had just announced.
I have my weakness, I’ll allow, but my worst is that my promise is better than my performance, and my most ill-judged acts are well intended.
With a few exceptions, I generally found myself inhibited around youth, for acceptability was judged within narrow and often unreasonable bounds with which I did not care to grapple.
Side note: By foreign Canons you will be judged] The fatal mistake on the part of a young priest would be to take Irish opinion as the standard by which he will be judged outside Ireland.
Reverse this, and you have the accurate measure by which you will be judged abroad.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "judged" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.