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judgmental
[ juhj-men-tl ]
adjective
- involving the use or exercise of judgment.
- tending to make quick and excessively critical judgments, especially moral ones:
to avoid a judgmental approach in dealing with divorced couples.
judgmental
/ ʌˈɛԳə /
adjective
- of or denoting an attitude in which judgments about other people's conduct are made
Other 51Թ Forms
- ܻ岵·t· adverb
- ܲjܻ岵·t adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of judgmental1
Example Sentences
“I always thought the right overstated how judgmental my party was, and I’ll be candid with you, I have a deeper understanding now of that critique than I ever, ever, ever understood.”
Even the day scenes feel tinged by darkness — especially when Shula visits her dead uncle’s home to find a neglected hovel of forgotten children likely to be abandoned by her judgmental aunties.
Maybe it’s because I was being accepted for the rawest version of myself: loud, artistic, sometimes judgmental, but always warm and open to new people and experiences.
As seems to be the case in most every modern romantic comedy — this is, often, in a purposely self-conscious way — she has been serially dating with poor results, not helped by her own judgmental attitude.
“Michael Cox was a judgmental person, who would single out young women and label them,” Tepper told the jury.
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