sit+in+judgment
81Henry III — • German king and Holy Roman Emperor (1017 1056) Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Henry III Henry III † …
82Conflict of Investitures — Conflict of Investitures † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Conflict of Investitures (Ger. Investiturstreit.) The terminus technicus for the great struggle between the popes and the German kings Henry IV and Henry V, during the period 1075 …
83judge — Synonyms and related words: account, account as, act between, adjudge, adjudicate, adjudicator, administer, administer justice, administrate, allow, amateur, appraise, appraiser, appreciate, approximate, arbiter, arbiter elegantiarum, arbiter of… …
84adjudicate — I adjudge, adjudicate (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. judge (See judgment). II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. mediate, settle, adjudge, arbitrate; see decide . III (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) (VOCABULARY WORD) v. [uh JOO di KATE] to judge and… …
85judge — I. n. 1. Justice. 2. Arbiter, arbitrator, umpire, referee. 3. Critic, connoisseur. II. v. n. Decide, determine, conclude, form an opinion, pass an opinion, pass judgment, get at the truth, arrive at the truth, sit in judgment. III. v. a. 1. Try,… …
86fair and impartial trial — A hearing by an impartial and disinterested tribunal; a proceeding which hears before it condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial consideration of evidence and facts as a whole. A basic constitutional guarantee …
87fair and impartial trial — A hearing by an impartial and disinterested tribunal; a proceeding which hears before it condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial consideration of evidence and facts as a whole. A basic constitutional guarantee …
88hear — Synonyms and related words: apprehend, approve of, arbitrate, ascertain, attend, attend to, auscultate, be all ears, be aware of, be conscious of, be informed, be sensible of, be told, bend an ear, bug, catch, catch on, charge the jury, cock the… …
89Judge — Judge, v. t. 1. To hear and determine by authority, as a case before a court, or a controversy between two parties. Chaos [shall] judge the strife. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. To examine and pass sentence on; to try; to doom. [1913 Webster] God… …
90judge — I. verb (judged; judging) Etymology: Middle English juggen, from Anglo French juger, from Latin judicare, from judic , judex judge, from jus right, law + dicere to decide, say more at just, diction Date: 13th century transitive verb 1. to form an …