69 Metaphors for judged

" Now this judge was a political accident, having been pitchforked into office by the providence that sometimes watches over sailors, drunks and third parties.

Queen Victoria at various times was the possessor of one or more fine specimens of the Bloodhound, procured for her by Sir Edwin Landseer, and a capital hound from the Home Park Kennels at Windsor was exhibited at the London Show in 1869, the judge on the occasion being the Rev. Thomas Pearce, afterwards known as "Idstone."

The Judge is fury.

These judges were mere boys, who seemed quite proud of the part they were playing, and gave themselves no end of airs, I asked the governor of the gaol soon afterwards what had been done with the gendarme.

Such crying ingratitude and malicious detraction prove that these self-constituted judges are as great knaves morally as they are intellectually, which is saying a great deal.

A very good judge may be a wretchedly bad joker; and he must go through his career at this disadvantage, that people, finding him silly at the thing they are able to estimate, find it hard to believe that he is not silly at everything.

Here the judge of good and evil is the conscience, which is not secure against error.

And the Judge of your workHe is no stern taskmaster, no unfeeling tyrant, but Jesus Christ, your Lord, who died for you on the Cross.

What before an adjective seems sometimes to denote with admiration the degree of the quality; and is called, by some, an adverb; as, "What partial judges are our love and hate!"Dryden.

Another judge who excelled in conversation was the late Lord Bowen.

This prosecution was conducted by Francis Page, whose severity Pope immortalised in the lines: "Slander or poison dread from Delia's rage Hard-words or hangingif your judge be Page.

The proper judge, sir, of this affair, is his majesty's attorney general, who is not now in the house.

"I say, Judge" (Pigworth, being a justice of the peace, was universally styled thus), cried a voice from the group, "do you, or do you not, indorse my sentiments?" Pigworth turned majestically, and spoke like an oracle: "I do not indorse your sentiments.

The prisoner was assumed to be guilty, the burden of proving his innocence rested on him; his judge was virtually his prosecutor.

Mr. Carneal had heard that the judge was an extremely brutal man to his slaves, and was likewise excited with liquor; and, upon the judge inviting him and others to take a drink with him, Carneal replied that he would not drink with a man who abused his negroes; this the judge resented as an insult, and high words ensued.

The higher judge is the universal and absolute Spirit alonethe World-Spirit.

The "good judge" here spoken of, is Quintilian; whose words on the point are these: "Necessarium est judicium, constituendumque imprimis, id ipsum quid sit, quod consuetudinem vocemus.

Since, of the two, it is the jeweller who best administers justice, let the jeweller be a judge, and the judge be a jeweller.

It is furthermore true that the Filipinos are more inclined to be suspicious of their own countrymen than of Americans, and there have been from time to time specific requests from them that judges in certain provinces be Americans.

Evstáfii Ivánovitch, many will not believe my words, because each conceals the cruelty of his nature, and his secret revengefulness, under excuses of necessityeach says, with a pretence of feeling, 'Really I wish from my heart to pardon, but be judges yourselvescan I?

The judge was Mr. Baron Hatsel, a somewhat weak-looking man, in spite of his red robes and flowing wig, as he sat under his canopy beneath King Arthur's Round Table.

He quoted from "L'Esprit des Lois" an assertion of Montesquieu, that "one of the excellences of the English constitution was, that the judicial power was separated from the legislative, and that there would be no liberty if they were blended together; the power over the life and liberty of the citizens would then be arbitrary, for the judge would be the legislator."

Thereto judge, at least, from photographsthe Mango must be indeed the queen of trees; growing to the size of the largest English oak, and keeping always the round oak-like form.

In theory it may be true, as Hamilton contended, that, given the fact that a written constitution is inevitable, a bench of judges is the best tribunal to interpret its meaning, since the duty of the judge has ever been and is now to interpret the meaning of written instruments; but it does not follow from this premise that the judges who should exercise this office should be the judges who administer the municipal law.

But when that government does not represent the will of the people, when it supports dishonesty and terrorism, the judges and the executive officials by retaining office become instrument of dishonesty and terrorism.

69 Metaphors for  judged