I have made Judgment
The root word in "judicious" is "judice," which comes from the Latin word "judicium," meaning judgment or decision.
Rise to judgment is the English equivalent of 'Surge ad judicium'. In the word by word translation, the verb 'surge' means 'rise'. The preposition 'ad' means 'to'. The noun 'judicium' means 'judgment'.
Manus manus, meaning hand, and facio facere feci factum, meaning make.
Benoit Garceau has written: 'Judicium' -- subject(s): Judgment
I meow and I did. (Grammatically correct, makes no sense.)
"Feces" as a noun and "I did" or "I made" as a verb are literal English equivalents of the Italian word feci. Regardless of use as a feminine plural noun or as the first person singular of the remote past tense of the verb, the pronunciation remains "FEH-chee" in Italian.
factor, from fact- 'done,' from the verb facere .
The term "jud" in "judicial" is derived from the Latin root "judicium," meaning "judgment" or "to judge." It relates to the administration of justice and the process of making legal decisions. Essentially, "judicial" pertains to the courts, judges, and the legal system involved in interpreting and applying the law.
Feci. It comes from the verb facere, to make/do, it is in the perfect tense. :)
Feci. (This is pronounced FEH-chee). The English word feces is derived from Latin. Also, poop in Italian is poppa.
The word prejudice is circa 1290, from Old French prejudice (13 century), from Medieval Latin prejudicium "injustice," from Latin præjudicium"prior judgment," from præ- "before" + judicium"judgment," from judex (genitive judicis) "judge." The notion is of "preconceived opinion;" the verb meaning "to affect or fill with prejudice" is from 1610.
dedi, deli, feci, kepi, levi, nevi, peri, semi, veri, yeti