Yes. It can also be a noun.
Verb: To form an opinion on.
Noun: A person who decides the fate of something or someone.
The Three verb form of Judge are 1) judge 2) Judging 3) Judged
judge is the verb
The word 'judge' is both a noun (judge, judges) and a verb (judge, judges, judging, judged). A noun form of the noun 'judge' is judgement. A noun form of the verb 'judge' is the gerund, judging.
The word judge, like many English words, can be either a verb or a noun. If I say, "Don't judge me." I am using it as a verb. If I say, "The judge has ruled in my favor." I am using it as a noun.
Yes, the word judge is both a noun (judge, judges) and a verb (judge, judges, judging, judged). The noun 'judge' is a word for a personExamples:The judge declared my client not guilty on charges of assault. (noun)Don't judge a book by its cover. (verb)
The word 'judge' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'judge' is a word for someone given the authority to make decisions; a word for a person.The noun forms of the verb to judge are judgement and the gerund, judging.
No. It is either a verb or a noun. Judge as in judging something is a verb. It describes an action. Judge as in a court judge, is a noun. It's a person. Judge isn't an adverb, unless you change it's form to 'judgingly' as in 'He judgingly reviewed my work.' In that sentence, judgingly modified reviewed. How did he review my work? Judgingly.
Judge.
judge
The verb form of judgment is "judge." It is used to express the action of forming an opinion or making a decision after careful consideration of a situation or person.
The verb "to judge" has a third-person present-tense conjugation "judges". (He, or she, judges.) The plural noun applying to court officials is also "judges". (e.g. Magistrate judges)
The verb form of judge means to give an opinion or conclusion. Never judge a book by its cover.