The present tense of "judge" is "judge."
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 noun judge is judge's.Example: The sound of the judge's gavel is still ringing in my ears.
The plural form of judge advocate is judge advocates.
A retired judge is commonly referred to as a "retired judge." They may also be addressed as "former judge" or simply by their title, such as "Judge [Last Name]."
The opposite of judge using a prefix is misjudge.
Executrix...
well, my advice is to always go the opposite way. Pay the jury and flirt with the judge.
Yes it is wrong in terms of religion, but we don't judge or hate them. If they are bi, they are attracted to the opposite gender and can choose to be straight.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'judge' is a commongender noun, a word for a male or a female.
Yes, one has to stand on a ladder type thing and referee to serve the ball. The other has to stand on the opposite side of the court and judge if the ball goes in or out.
It means when the lawyers object to what the lawyers on the opposite side are saying, and the judge doesn't agree to the objection, then he overrules it.
Line judge or linesman or something along those lines. They stand at the back (opposite the net) left corner of each side of the court.
The word "delante" means "in front (of)". Eg. In front of a judge = Delante de un juez.
There is now an eight official system for most college games. The eighth official's position name has been changed to the Center Judge (C) but his location on the field is the same as the Alternate Judge (A) was back in 2013 e.g. in the offensive backfield opposite the Referee (R).
Judge Judy, Judge Mathis, Judge Wapner, Judge Joe Brown
The present tense of "judge" is "judge."