being non-judgmental means not judging other people, events, or even items so harshly. This can be a great new years resolution...
No there is no hypen in the word nonjudgemental.
nonjudgemental
A quick scan reveals that all three possible syntaxes for the term are in use, and acceptable: non judgemental, non-judgemental, and nonjudgemental.
Exploration of the American Dream and its limitations. Critique of the hedonistic pursuit of wealth and status. Complex characters who are morally ambiguous and struggle with the consequences of their actions.
Emma Woodhouse is a wealthy and privileged young woman who is well-intentioned but often meddles in other people's lives. She is confident and headstrong, but also can be self-absorbed and naive. Mr. George Knightley, on the other hand, is a mature, sensible, and respected landowner who serves as a voice of reason and guidance for Emma. He is patient and caring, and serves as a moral compass for Emma, often challenging her behavior and helping her grow as a person.
peeing, being, fleeing, freeing, geeing, keying, kneeing, seeing, teeing, agreeing, foreseeing, sightseeing, time being, well being, disagreeing, guaranteeing, human being, supreme being, animate being, come into being, for the time being, mythical being, spiritual being, imaginary being, supernatural being, extraterrestrial being.
Being verbs are verbs of being such as is, am, being, been, was, were, and can
Use "is being" when the subject is singular (he is being, it is being) and "are being" when the subject is plural (they are being, we are being). Both forms are used to describe actions that are happening at the moment or in a temporary state.
being
Him
Being poor is okay, not being first is okay, and not being in the spotlight is okay
The past progressive form of the verb "to be" is "was/were being." For example, "I was being," "He was being," "They were being."