There is no such title. It is simply an honorary and/or respectful way of referring to a sitting judge.
Judge is present tense.
Lord Ellenborough, a British judge in the 19th century, is often credited with saying "The law is an ass" in the context of a ruling he made. This quote has since been popularized in various forms in literature and media to critique the perceived absurdity or rigidity of the legal system.
The possessive form of the noun judge is judge's.Example: The sound of the judge's gavel is still ringing in my ears.
The possessive form of the noun judge is judge's.Example: The sound of the judge's gavel is still ringing in my ears.
The plural form is judge advocates.
Don't judge a book by its cover. Or people aren't always who they seem.
You can't judge a book by it's cover, or in this case you can't judge a person by there appearance.
yes, thing are not alway what it seems and don't judge a book by its cover
They enjoy watching the jurors and the judge and like to listen to the learned lawyers.
I learned to not judge a person by the way they look, if you do then it could lead to harassment. Or in this case, mass murder.
Dont judge a book by its cover Some rumors ain't true
There really is no answer but if their was I would say its don't judge people by their looks but what's in the inside.
Kathryn P. Griffith has written: 'Judge Learned Hand and the role of the Federal judiciary' -- subject(s): Judicial power
Christine Daae studied Opera, different types, learned to sing and to not judge ugly appearance, she was fully accepting of the Phantom when his mask was removed.
You need to express your remorse for what you did. You also need to explain the lesson that you have learned, and the reasons why you will never break the law again.
The cast of Trial by Jury - 2005 includes: David Hobson as The Defendant Ali McGregor as Plaintiff Anthony Warlow as Learned Judge
to derive by reasoning; conclude or judge from premises or evidence -Dictionary.com Simple terms it means creating a conclusion based on everything you've learned from some sort of experiment.