Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

157 Sentences With "judged as"

How to use judged as in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "judged as" and check conjugation/comparative form for "judged as". Mastering all the usages of "judged as" from sentence examples published by news publications.

While Howard was judged as terrifically competent, Heidi was judged as unlikeable, Rivers explained.
I have asked to be judged as quickly as possible.
It's quite humbling to be judged as being so calculating.
Should an executive's words be judged as harshly as their actions?
What would be judged as "negatively affecting" a political viewpoint then?
Should the fight be judged as a whole or in parts?
Such pupils are being judged as less capable than they really are.
Associate with deadbeats, and you're more likely to be judged as one.
Purely judged as a smartphone its performance isn't anything to write home about.
I think we almost overcompensate so we're not judged as being biased toward weight.
I know that long-term is how you'll be judged-- as opposed to short-term.
"I'm quite sure that outstanding measures will be judged as having been fulfilled," the official added.
Judged as an attempt to recreate a quasi-mythical past, things did not go so smoothly.
Cosmetology schools, the judge said, needed more room to appeal when they were judged as failing.
Such a policy has merit, Flake says, but work ethic should be judged as a skill.
The metrics by which each jurisdiction will be judged as a success or failure remain unclear.
A fifth of serving officers, it revealed, had shared content judged as troubling, including racial epithets.
The CGF did not elaborate on the reasons for Birmingham's bid being judged as not fully compliant.
Sexism, bullying, inequality, lack of diversity, low empathy all are being judged as negative factors for ROI.
Judged as an act of high statecraft, the appointment is one to furrow brows in capitals worldwide.
Italy, Austria, Lithuania and Spain are also judged as "at risk of non-compliance" with EU rules.
"But it's possible that it would be judged as inappropriately blunt and, therefore, sexually unappetizing," she says.
The Houthi tribesmen are judged as being breakable from their Iranian links, but not this time around.
The governor of California and his wife, Anne, judged as a team, as they do almost everything.
So Biden is going to start to be judged as a potential nominee after his Super Tuesday performance.
"For those that do, like myself, they face instant criticism, are judged as a sucker — an idiot," he wrote.
We've known, at least since Aristotle in Western culture, that the source is judged as part of the message.
As the leaders of their teams, quarterbacks are often judged as much by their records as their own statistics.
However, with Alipay's system, it's the habits of your friends that will be judged as well as your own spending.
"He will be judged as whether or not he has leadership qualities by the way he handles this," she said.
China made an initial offer on digital trade that the United States judged as insufficient, the report said, citing a source.
"To be competely honest, and I'm gonna be judged as a martial artist, I've never seen 'The Karate Kid,'" Paige said.
Personally, I prefer any creation to be enjoyed or judged as a puzzle first and foremost, regardless of who made it.
I am extremely proud of my husband and his achievements — but no one wants to be judged as her partner's accessory.
Democrats took back the House in November, netting 40 seats in an election widely judged as a repudiation of Trump's presidency.
They will fight to ensure their clients are not demonized, but rather seen and judged as human beings worthy of compassion.
"Growing up D'Andra Simmons, anything I did was judged as to whether or not it was acceptable in Dallas society," she said.
"When it is exceeded, the amount will probably be judged as not so great as to spark a crisis," says Mr Fitzpatrick.
But if America is about anything, it is the idea that people should be judged as individuals with individual liberties and rights.
Researchers found eight randomized controlled trials that were on point, but they were all judged as having a high risk of bias.
If not, when the history of this era is written, they will be judged as completely failing in their duties as citizens.
Eshel&aposs picture was judged as "Highly Commended" in the Endangered Planet category of the 2019 Travel Photographer of the Year competition.
I think those feelings may be threatening for people to admit because they fear that they would be judged as a selfish mother.
The region: Here, the impact of the nuclear deal is at best judged as incomplete, and at worst as something of a setback.
Winning money means a boost in self-worth and being judged as having upright moral character, while losing it could mean the opposite.
His record was judged as mixed, with the 2012 summer Olympics considered a triumph (though not one in which he did much organizing).
While the death was later ruled an accident, and the injuries judged as being likely self-inflicted, the timing couldn't have been worse.
Those with dental problems were more likely to be judged as less intelligent and were less likely to be considered suitable for hiring.
Throughout the election, he turned what might have been judged as moral lapses into heroic refusals to conform to politically correct moral criteria.
A fall was considered a huge mistake because programs were judged as a whole, with less attention paid to the minutiae of individual elements.
Ley has proposed that men may feel that they have better social status if their partner is judged as sexually desirable by other men.
Although the ball was eventually judged as a hit after being originally ruled an error, it was a play that should have been made.
Downsides: You may be judged as a "hipster" for using one, and, as far as cables go, they're definitely on the more expensive side.
Mr Bongo's problem is that he seems to want to be judged as a real democratically-elected world statesman, not as a thuggish autocrat.
It is not too much to say that he expects to be judged as a leader partly on how well he fulfils OBOR's goals.
Instagrammers who post selfies may be judged as more insecure, less successful, less likeable, and less open to new experiences, a new study suggests.
" But I felt more comfortable with that role than with the possibility that I would be judged as "slow" or "weird" or even "greedy.
About three-quarters of girls 14 to 19 in the survey said they felt judged as a sexual object or unsafe as a girl.
You had better confess before we find out, or else you will also be judged as a liar, and the repercussions will be graver yet.
She condemned the vote in June, saying she could not permit her relationship or her family to be judged as lesser by the Australian public.
"If OPEC can be judged as getting its groove back last year, a lot of the credit goes to its savvy Secretary General," Croft wrote.
But I feel like even if I had, I'd have chalked it up to envy and not to being judged as some Bluetooth-wearing Wall Streeter.
That is just a large number of wars or military interventions, and it's easy to see why Clinton has been judged as hawkish as a result.
It did not say what type of service people would be allowed to do, or say how people will be judged as eligible for alternative service.
And it is only through submitting to what is right, even if at great cost, that the rest of one's life can be judged as respectable.
"I want to treat Russia as if it is a nation state that deserves to be judged as all other nation states are judged," he said.
That it was your inaugural effort will have no special significance; your work will be judged the way books are typically judged: as interesting or dull.
Instead of being evaluated and praised for her athletic merit after the win, her body was unfairly judged as transforming an ordinary swimsuit into something obscene.
But who cares about quality when perhaps all that you need to do in order to be judged as really significant is to embody the zeitgeist?
"Although these risks are judged as not significant at this point ... the BOJ will scrutinize developments and encourage financial institutions to take action as necessary," he said.
But I always like to revert back to the similarly situated test, that is to say, would a man in a similar situation be judged as harshly?
But many women worry that they will be judged as unprofessional (unlike their male colleagues) if their clothes are deemed to be too scruffy, or too revealing.
"The NHS is a service that is meant to be free at the point of delivery and every person should be judged as an individual," he said.
Both require major administrative resources and funds but tend to be judged as lower priorities than getting unemployment insurance checks out the door and to recipients quickly.
Now in its fourth year, The Berlin Art Prize was founded out of a frustration at always seeing the same names judged as critically worthy of recognition.
What a very few are acquiring in knowledge of the physical world will perhaps cause this period not to be judged as a pure return of barbarism.
Throughout, she retains the palpable loneliness of an only — someone who, by virtue of being so outnumbered, is judged as a stand-in for an entire population.
But previous research on creativity suggests that the fear of embarrassment — of being judged as incompetent and awkward — is what inhibits idea generation, rather than embarrassment itself.
The authority was the de facto government installed by the U.S. after its March 2003 invasion of Iraq, and its performance is often judged as a failure.
The median estimate of the long-run interest rate, where monetary policy would be judged as having a neutral effect on the economy, held steady at 3.0 percent.
Rarely are they judged by literary standards (Barack Obama's Dreams of My Father being perhaps an exception); instead they are mainly judged as means to their respective ends.
Since children with disabilities are often judged as incapable of growing into self-sufficient adults, they would be considered a public charge more often than their nondisabled peers.
They want to be judged as individual artists, not as a two-for-one special, and they insisted, in a manner forthright and justifiably exasperated, on separate interviews.
This creates a vicious cycle in which women either don't seek out funding or can't get the funding they need because their ventures are judged as low growth.
"No presidency before this one was so often judged as if it were a performing art," Dan Rather says during a broadcast shown toward the end of the film.
Malallah has undoubtedly had a highly unusual art career so far, but she wants to be judged as she judges other artists: on the quality of her work alone.
Recovery from addiction should not be judged as a competitive sport, and there is no evidence that patients benefit by taking a more difficult and dangerous route to recovery.
It's difficult to think of a woman, and impossible to think of a family of women, whose bodies are scrutinized and judged as much as the Kardashians' bodies are.
But Hollande, who was more pugnacious and confident than in a TV interview earlier this year which had unanimously been judged as poor by commentators, said his reforms were working.
"This does not mean that somebody is being pre-judged as guilty, but rather that it will be decided in another country whether they are guilty or innocent," he said.
Students are "coming into a space full of trans and non-binary people and working together, not being judged as [they] are in every other aspect of life," McNamara said.
Many aren't looking for multi-partner marriage, anyway, she said -- they just want to feel free to have relationships currently outside the norm without being judged as freaks or outcasts.
At the time, it was widely judged as inferior to Mr. Waits and Mr. Wilson's "The Black Rider," which had debuted two years earlier and is currently being staged in Regensburg.
In fairness, Clinton can say that the IG report finds the decision not to prosecute her for violating national security was judged as reasonable and not the result of evidence of bias.
Before 2006, under the older 6.0-based scoring system, a fall like Kolyada's would have spelled doom for his chances at a medal because of how programs were judged as a whole.
Nearby, the Portuguese, Berlin-based artist Grada Kilomba, tells a three-part story, using white text projected onto black screens, about the experience of being silenced and judged as a black woman.
Rather, the problem seems to be one of perspective and approach, where the raw realness of Fox's film about her own experiences is judged as less significant than a flashy, button-pushing romp.
It told me that that apocalyptic Yawm al-Qiyamah (day of judgement) would come when I would be judged as an apostate, one of the worst of sins, and put into Jahannum (hell).
If it were to be judged as a tablet alone, the Switch would be a disaster: It's too chunky, and it has a giant exposed vent for cooling the processor and catching crumbs.
Still, national Democrats haven't yet managed to entice a candidate who would traditionally be judged as top-tier, like a member of Congress or a well-known statewide figure, into the Arizona race.
Learning to play football when you're a woman in your twenties means you're essentially being judged as pathetic and hopeless by the same patriarchal attitudes that prohibited you from learning to play earlier.
In comments that threatened broader economic consequences, Gabriel said he could not advise companies to invest in a country without legal certainty where "even completely innocent companies are judged as being close to terrorists".
Although it's less clear whether the relatively small amount of obfuscation it's toying with here would be enough to ensure the location logs are no longer judged as riders' personal data under the regulation.
HOW HISTORY WILL JUDGE HIM I fear that the only issue history will care about before too long is climate chaos, and that in that respect he'll be judged as temporizing and half-hearted.
"This means male candidates are free to interrupt, while female candidates face a double bind: stay silent and fail to be heard, or speak up and get judged as too aggressive," Dr. Grant explained.
It also allows police to petition a court for a "risk-protection" order barring an individual from possessing firearms if that person is judged as dangerous because of a mental illness or violent behavior.
A recent nationwide survey by PerryUndem, a research and polling firm, found that about three-quarters of girls 14 to 19 said they felt judged as a sexual object or unsafe as a girl.
"Many times, I was showed nude images of myself as examples to coerce me into posing nude, and whenever I stood my ground and refused, I was criticized and judged as being difficult," she wrote.
A recent study found that, while the appearances of male students don't seem to affect their grades, female students who are perceived as unattractive get lower grades than female students who are judged as attractive.
India will need to perform a delicate balancing act negotiating a raft of economic, technological and regulatory issues to pull off its ambitious renewable plans or risk being judged as an overpromising and underdelivering laggard.
If you're a man being evaluated for a job as a lab manager, you will be given more mentorship, judged as more capable, and offered a higher starting salary than if you were a woman.
If she finds herself competing with him, the very least Harris deserves, the very least the voting public deserves, is to be judged as an adult in her own right, running under her own name.
A photo of chimps reaching out to the camera for help has been judged as one of the most striking nature photos of the year, according to the Nature Photographer of the Year 2019 competition.
In a country where GDP per capita is $220,212 and 60 percent of people live on less than $1.25 a day, according to U.N. data, having a home is judged as more important than safety.
Far from being judged as antisocial or lazy, the homebody economy is our new way of decompressing from the stresses of the outside world and logging off from a nonstop stream of other people's lives.
In the past, the women who came forward were judged as being as lying, or [making it] up or crazy, and now people are finally saying 'No, this is actually happening, and we should stop it.
The territories point out that they have improved their tax-transparency and anti-money-laundering regimes to the point where they are judged as good as or better than those of several OECD countries, including America.
But most short-sighted of all, Trump's own words fashioned a measuring stick by which I doubt he wants to be judged as he prepares to launch his riskiest diplomacy yet on the Korean Peninsula. Why?
" And this is why in 1993 Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg reminded senators when she appeared for questioning after her nomination to the Supreme Court that she should be "judged as a judge, not as an advocate.
Negotiations have been going on for more than six years to update the treaty, which came into force in 2004 and governs access to 64 crops and forage plants judged as key to feeding the world.
"It's absolutely a possibility," Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University professor of law, said on CNN, laying out two possibilities if the administration could not get the consent agreement modified, a scenario he judged as doubtful.
But in an era of franchise entertainment and increasingly homogenized cultural production, where films and television and even books are judged as successes based on the money they bring in, such a space is increasingly unthinkable.
Rohrabacher said "none of the meetings were untoward or inappropriate," per the Times: "I want to treat Russia as if it is a nation state that deserves to be judged as all other nation states are judged."
"From a scientific standpoint, people in a blackout can still behave voluntarily and make personal decisions, even if those decisions may not be judged as good ones," said Fromme, who has no relation to the Kavanaugh case.
The Commission decided Microsoft would have no incentive to undermine the GitHub's openness — saying any attempt to do so would reduce its value for developers, who the Commission judged as willing and able to switch to other platforms.
Schoolchildren, for instance, are often afraid of appearing to need to improve; worrying that they will be perceived and judged as unintelligent, they struggle not to learn but to seem smart (even plagiarizing and cheating if need be).
Since the early 210s, after he said he "dropped his reserve," his subsequent refusal to say what his work is about has led to him being judged as hermetic, as someone given to hiding something from the viewer.
"The war, with its cost in lives and treasure and security, can't be judged as anything other than a mistake, a very serious one, and I have to accept my share of the blame for it," he wrote.
But this time it didn't know in advance where the statement fell on the six point truth metric used on Politifact, where statements are judged as either 'pants-fire,' 'false,' 'barely-true,' 'half-true,' 'mostly-true,' and 'true.
Still, some effects are pretty clearly from the debates themselves — as in 2012, when President Obama's 4 point lead in the polls abruptly vanished after what was judged as a weak performance in his first debate against Mitt Romney.
"Sharply higher U.S. yields are providing an initial boost for USD/JPY while concerns over more protectionist U.S. trade policies which would favour a stronger yen are judged as less important for now," MUFG currency analyst Lee Hardman said.
But, importantly, Cameron more than Corbyn and the other leaders were judged as possessing the traits an effective Prime Minister is generally believed to need — a clear vision (52%), patriotism (65%), sound judgment (37%), and good in times of crisis (48%).
The Beverly Hillbillies, the shopping scene in Pretty Woman, Jay Gatsby — we have a special soft spot for a character who is judged as low class, even after they get rich (although that doesn't seem to extend to our current president).
"Our intervention aimed to have no grey list published or, if so, that Liechtenstein was judged as conforming (with EU rules) and did not appear on it," he said, noting that the principality had every right to defend its national interests.
Increasingly, feminism is judged as much on how we treat each other on a day-to-day basis as it is on government policy -- so there is no hiding place for the politician who says one thing and then does another.
"These scenarios have been judged as nil or low-impact in practice, but we appreciate the authors' work to identify where the standard is written ambiguously, which may lead to clarifications in the future," GSMA told WIRED in a statement.
Her academic work continued to thrive as she collaborated with Fiske on research on stereotyping, which found that groups of people (for example of a particular ethnicity) who were judged as nice were assumed to be less competent and vice versa.
But the idea that people can be judged as individuals based on the economic class to which they belong is one of the foulest in history, matching if not exceeding in its murderous consequences the legacies of racism and colonialism combined.
In his new memoir, McCain who is battling brain cancer, writes that the Iraq War "can't be judged as anything other than a mistake, a very serious one, and I have to accept my share of the blame for it," as Politico reports.
When participants were told that a woman occupied the clean room, it was judged as less clean than when a man occupied it, and she was thought to be less likely to be viewed positively by visitors and less comfortable with visitors.
With only servers as sets, is The Lion King (still no release date, but expect it sometime around 2020, complete with songs from the original, per Disney) to be judged as an animated or a live-action movie when it comes to awards time?
The department has identified twelve technologies that it thinks could help offset these problems, with three of these judged as being particularly important: vehicle-to-vehicle communication, autonomous driving technology, and infrastructure that uses embedded sensors to warn of things like imminent traffic jams.
"We're looking to all options and there are some cases where the (WTO) appellate body has judged, as late as this spring, that the U.S. is still not complying with old cases," she said, in an apparent reference to a WTO finding on Boeing subsidies.
While the ECB said it would reduce the monthly value of purchases, they will continue until at least the end of next year - longer than the market expected - and were accompanied by a handful of other measures judged as negative for the single currency going forward.
" While Bonacorso's alien projects serenity, the humans' perplexity at his aloofness plays out in two narratives, one of empathy in the lead character, and another of defensiveness with a retired military official who states, "Peace and quiet can generally be judged as ongoing, covert enemy action.
Betty Hsu, a well-regarded pageant coach based in the Bay Area, tells me many of her clients want help with the glamorous aspects of pageantry because they don't have a chance to play up their beauty in their work life, where they might be judged as incompetent.
" For @MeghanMcCain and those clamoring for regime change wars: Sen McCain "The (Iraq) war, with its cost in lives and treasure and security, can't be judged as anything other than a mistake, a very serious one, and I have to accept my share of the blame for it.
" It reads, in part: "We recall that the Republican Party was founded in the struggle against slavery and a rejection of the racial beliefs...promoting instead the foundational idea that each person be judged as an individual on merit and not on the color of skin or other circumstances of birth.
In these opinions, Thomas argued that our commitment to the ideal of inherent equality memorialized in the majestic words of the Declaration of Independence that "all men are created equal" means every person should be judged as an individual rather than as a member of a certain racial or ethnic group.
Parenting experts make matters worse Hillary Frank, creator of the popular podcast "The Longest Shortest Time" and author of the upcoming book "Weird Parenting Wins," said she did feel judged as a new parent, particularly for her willingness to sleep-train, as well as her desire to have just one child.
Magic Johnson, at a news conference where he expounded on the Lakers' free-agent strategy, made a case that the only team in the league with the cap room to sign two stars outright would still need "two summers" before he could be fairly judged as the team's top executive.
In 2006, Mr. Cameron had foolishly dismissed UKIP members as "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists" — a remark as unfortunate and ill-judged as Hillary Clinton's "basket of deplorables" — yet it was they who ended up winning the race they cared most about, bringing down the Cameron premiership along the way.
"Our wish in doing this law is that the aggressor will be judged as a rapist, or that the judge can decide not to retain the rape charge, but in that case the adult will face a very high penalty of 10 years," said Marlène Schiappa, the junior minister for gender equality.
People who order the same foods all the time are afraid to be seen as boring, people who order a lot of food are anxious about being judged as gluttons, people who place small orders might worry about being seen as lazy and time wasters, or that they can't afford more food.
No matter what the circumstances were, or whether Japan was about to surrender, incinerating thousands of innocent civilian men, women and children who lived in these cities on the premise that it could possibly save the lives of thousands of American troops in a future invasion cannot be judged as anything but grossly immoral.
I asked Last via email about his piece and his thoughts on the law, and he told me that while "I suppose it's possible that the AL legislators thought they were making some bold legal maneuver," if the law doesn't get before the Supreme Court, "I don't see how it can be judged as anything but a very significant mistake."
Fine, I'll take a paragraph break, but I'm not done: a tale of how not to apologize (clue: don't try to exercise draconian control over your employees' personal social media accounts on the same day you're publicly apologizing for your previous draconian mistreatment of them); of the sacrifices required to build a startup; of how the real problem boils down to mismanagement and misaligned incentives, and the rest is noise; of how what previous generations considered shitty but acceptable boss behavior is now judged as completely unacceptable toxic abuse.

No results under this filter, show 157 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.