The judge that imposes the sentence.
Dont judge a person by his or her physical appearance.
A judge must be a person of high principle. perfect
Generally a judge will impose an incarceration time then suspend the sentence if the convicted person completes the alternative penatlty. As an example, a person is given a 1 year suspended sentence with X-amount of hours of community service to be served within that year. If the person does not complete the community service requirement the judge can send that person to jail to serve the entire original sentence of 1 year.
The judge applied the reasonable person standard to determine if the defendant's actions were justified in self-defense.
Yes, the word "judge" should be capitalized when it is used as a title before a name or when it is directly addressing a judge. For example: "Judge Smith presided over the case."
Being an ecclesiastical person, the judge let the preacher win the case.
It depends on the sentence for the second offense. If the judge sentences you to serve the second sentence consecutive (after) to the first, you will serve the remainder of the first sentence before beginning the second. If the judge orders the sentence concurrent, you will service both at the same time.
The subject in this sentence is "The stern judge." This is because the judge is the one performing the action of ruling in the sentence.
Sure! Here is an example sentence using the word "judge": "It is not fair to judge someone based on their appearance alone."
No. If the defendant was found not guilty WHAT would the judge sentence them for?
Yes, capitalize "judge" in the middle of a sentence if it is part of a proper noun or title like "Word Judge" in this case.