disspell
You can use the word "judgment" to refer to the ability to make considered decisions or form opinions. For example, "She used good judgment in choosing her friends."
Here's one: Use good judgement.
Not exactly, you can have a judgment that is based on law; but judgment can also mean something that is utterly unrelated to law.
Example sentence - We had to question his judgment due to the company he kept.
The word 'discretion' is a noun, a word for the quality of having or showing discernment or good judgment; a word for individual choice or judgment, the power of free decision; a word for a thing.
It is sensible!
The word 'criticism' is a noun, a word for the act of passing judgment as to the merits of something; a word for the act of passing severe judgment; censure; faultfinding; a word for a thing.The verb form is to criticize.The adjective is critical.The adverb is critically.
cretin
To take something mundane or bad and make it sound heroic or good.
repair fix rehab remodel renovate
The word you're looking for is "condemnation." It refers to the expression of strong disapproval or the act of declaring something to be wrong or evil, often accompanied by a judgment that is negative in nature.
No, the word good is a noun as a word for something conforming to a moral order; benefit or general welfare; something of value; a useful part.The plural noun goods is a word for something having value; something produced for purchase.The noun form for the adjective good is goodness.If you can make a sentence using the term 'mischievous good', it would be grammatically correct, the adjective mischievous describing the noun good. It doesn't make a lot of sense, but then I haven't seen the term in it's context in a sentence.