Sentence examples for may judge it from inspiring English sources

Exact(8)

"Furthermore, in certain circumstances the U.S. may judge it to be in its own national interest to participate directly in the destruction of an Iranian nuclear weapons capability.

If Celera's version of the human genome proves as good as its fruit fly genome, scientists may judge it to have chosen the better path.

It's best to pretend that Boaz Yakin's drama A PRICE ABOVE RUBIES (1998) is a TV movie; that way you may judge it more gently.

HISTORY may judge it a little odd that after the greatest accrual of private wealth in a century, the United States decided to give its richest citizens a giant tax break.

History may judge it to be less than the perfect modern classic it aims to be, but it is a memorable tale, distinguished by masterful prose, an intriguingly peculiar sensibility, and something hard to define that many great works of art have: a kind of dignity.

Another installation, of videos of scolding heads in a room with projected texts, pushes confrontation to an extreme -- you may judge it to be condescension rather than confrontation -- borrowing a tip or two from the work of Bruce Nauman, minus his essential black humor.

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Similar(52)

My neighbour, while recognising he may get something better from a specialist retailer, may judge that it will not be so reliably better (for my parents' generation, supermarkets were liberators from the risks of mouldy cheddar and maggoty apples) as to justify the extra cost and time.

Only the pregnant woman may judge what it is possible to live with.

In rare cases, physicians or the educator may judge that it would not be safe to allow a patient to self-adjust the diuretic medication (e.g., not reliable with the study protocol, not fully understanding the adjustment regimen, physician experience with the patient).

In Becker's lifetime it had become incumbent upon members of the professoriate, successors to the bards and minstrels of yesteryear, "to enlarge and enrich the specious present common to us all to the end that 'society' (the tribe, the nation, or all mankind) may judge of what it is doing in the light of what it has done and what it hopes to do".

They deny themselves the time or finances to invest in personal growth, happiness and peace, feeling that it's selfish, or that others may judge them for it.

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