The noun form of "judge" is "judgment."
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 singular noun judge is judge's.Example: The witness had the judge's complete attention.
The word 'judge' is a noun as a word for a public official appointed to decide cases in a court of law, or a word for a person who decides a competition; a word for a person.The noun forms of the verb to judge are judgement and the gerund, judging.
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 of the noun judge is judges.The plural possessive form is judges'.Example: All of the judges' attention was focused on the witness.
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 verb form of judge means to give an opinion or conclusion. Never judge a book by its cover.
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 singular noun judge is judge's.Example: The witness had the judge's complete attention.
The word 'judge' is a noun as a word for a public official appointed to decide cases in a court of law, or a word for a person who decides a competition; a word for a person.The noun forms of the verb to judge are judgement and the gerund, judging.
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 of the noun judge is judges.The plural possessive form is judges'.Example: All of the judges' attention was focused on the witness.
The abstract noun of "judge" is "judgment".
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.
Women judges is the plural of woman judge
The word judge is a common noun. Judge is a proper noun only when it is part of a proper name or title, such as Judge Greg Mathis, actor Judge Reinhold, or the comic book character Judge Dredd.
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)