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Definition of Judger
1. n. One who judges.
Definition of Judger
1. Noun. One who, or that which, judges. ¹
2. Noun. A judgmental person (contrasted with (term perceiver) as a personality type). ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Judger
1. one that judges [n -S] - See also: judges
Lexicographical Neighbors of Judger
Literary usage of Judger
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Arches and Prerogative Courts by Joseph Phillimore, Court of Arches (Church of England)., George Lee, Great Britain High Court of Delegates, Church of England Province of Canterbury. Prerogative Court (1833)
"Witnesses for judger. 1. Samuel Whitbread. — The deceased was the deponent's
servant nine years; he died in May 1752 ; the deponent went to see the deceased ..."
2. The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the House of by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, House of Lords, Parliament, Great Britain (1842)
"... the ad- judger and their heirs whatsoever." This is a very distinct expression
of opinion ; and I cannot help thinking, that when public opinion induced ..."
3. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the English Ecclesiastical Courts by George Lee, Great Britain (1835)
"Witnesses for judger. 2. William Shield.—Will made at Islington where the deceased
lodged ; deponent did not know the deceased; never saw him before, ..."
4. The Second Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Containing the by Edward Coke (1797)
"... whereupon fore-judger is given; now if the then no fore-judger (hould ...
uke away the benefit of the former ait concerning the fore-judger in a writ of ..."
5. Investigations Representing the Departments: Part 1. Systematic Theology by University of Chicago (1903)
"They expressly and positively include the participation of the judger in the
content judged, and of the object judged in the determination of the judger. ..."
6. A Digest of the Laws of England by John Comyns, Anthony Hammond, Thomas Day (1824)
"Formerly no bill could be filed against an attorney or officer of the common
pleas to be called in court in order to a fore- judger, until the bill was ..."
7. Elements of Modern Materialism: Inculcating the Idea of a Future State in by Charles Knowlton (1829)
"Here would be an error of the judger ; it would be an error to think that a two
inch cube bears the same relation toan inch cube, that two bears to •>if. ..."
8. Some Religious Implications of Pragmatism by Joseph Roy Geiger (1919)
"That is to say, in judging that this or that is good, or ought to be done, the
judger is in reality judging his own character; he is putting himself on ..."