Sentence examples for various judgements from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

So it seems that here one first has to assume the existence of the required circle, then use logic to make various judgements about it, and only thereby arrives at a mathematical construction for it.

Moreover, in-depth interviews of specialists have revealed that the decision to offer surgery involves "various judgements and skills derived from experience" which are partly "instinctive and partly informed by the literature" [ 49].

Similar(58)

I'm not sure only God can play God, but, amid the various nuances, judgement calls and philosophical, ethical and religious questions which attend this subject, it's hard to support potential inconvenience (which seems to be Mr Spector's argument) as a just cause for a fatal dose of barbiturates.

Traveling and being around other people of various cultures obliterates judgements of a racist nature.

Reflective equilibrium as a matter of interpretation of a specific issue needs to fully incorporate various views or judgements.

These categories and sub-categories described the patients' different experiences, which were also, to various degrees, value judgements of having been assigned an ADHD diagnosis.

It may be that different sets of items within the various structured professional judgement instruments and symptom inventories will predict violent recidivism, relapse or readmission.

To fill these data gaps, the model relies on the judgements of various experts, which leads to considerable uncertainty.

It raises the diagnosis judgements from various aspects to scientific conclusion with the advanced technologies of modeling and simulation and AI of computers.

It is also the case that people are often more confident in their judgements about various concrete cases than they are about abstract theories that attempt to account for their judgements, and so regard this is a more profitable way to approach a question (see Sunstein 1993, 775 7).

In systemic functional linguistics (SFL), MOOD refers to the mood types of indicative (declarative and interrogative) and imperative, and MODALITY covers the semantic space between 'yes' and 'no' and provides different ways 'in which a language user can intrude on his/her message, expressing attitudes and judgements of various kinds' (Eggins 1994, 179).

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