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Answer for the clue "Opinion giver ", 5 letters:
judge

Alternative clues for the word judge

Word definitions for judge in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Judge \Judge\, v. t. To hear and determine by authority, as a case before a court, or a controversy between two parties. ``Chaos [shall] judge the strife.'' --Milton. To examine and pass sentence on; to try; to doom. God shall judge the righteous ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, "to form an opinion about; make a decision," also "to try and pronounce sentence upon (someone) in a court," from Anglo-French juger , Old French jugier "to judge, pronounce judgment; pass an opinion on," from Latin iudicare "to judge, to examine ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Judge is an official who presides over a court. Judge or Judges may also refer to: Barrister , a superior lawyer that are appointed as QC Judge, an alternative name for a sports referee , umpire or linesman Judge, an alternative name for an adjudicator ...

Usage examples of judge.

He asked, what officers would risk this event if the rioters themselves, or their abettors, were afterwards to sit as their judges?

Judge must sentence her to an abjuration of all heresy, on pain of the punishment for backsliders, together with the perpetual penance, in the following manner.

Notary take care to set it down that the said abjuration was made by one gravely suspected of heresy, so that if she should be proved to have relapsed, she should then be judged accordingly and delivered up to the secular Court.

For it says there: He who has been involved in one kind or sect of heresy, or has erred in one article of the faith or sacrament of the Church, and has afterwards specifically and generally abjured his heresy: if thereafter he follows another kind or sect of heresy, or errs in another article or sacrament of the Church, it is our will that he be judged a backslider.

I think this must be admitted, when we find that there are hardly any domestic races, either amongst animals or plants, which have not been ranked by some competent judges as mere varieties, and by other competent judges as the descendants of aboriginally distinct species.

With a few thousand absentee ballots still uncounted and Republican Perry Hooper appearing to be ahead, the Democrats rushed into court to ask a judge to change the rules.

If it is working well, then it is absolutely and in all ways as good as any other system, and who are we to go judging further?

These probably sink down besmeared with the secretion and rest on the small sessile glands, which, if we may judge by the analogy of Drosophyllum, then pour forth their secretion and afterwards absorb the digested matter.

Judging from the number of men in town, it must be Saturday, Ace thought.

I certainly did not act towards them with a true sense of honesty, but if the reader to whom I confess myself is acquainted with the world and with the spirit of society, I entreat him to think before judging me, and perhaps I may meet with some indulgence at his hands.

To be sure, if we will all stop, and allow Judge Douglas and his friends to march on in their present career until they plant the institution all over the nation, here and wherever else our flag waves, and we acquiesce in it, there will be peace.

And, lest the expense or trouble of a journey to court should discourage suitors, and make them acquiesce in the decision of the inferior judicatures, itinerant judges were afterwards established, who made their circuits throughout the kingdom, and tried all causes that were brought before them.

Whether natural selection has really thus acted in nature, in modifying and adapting the various forms of life to their several conditions and stations, must be judged of by the general tenour and balance of evidence given in the following chapters.

Dostoevsky, we may adduce from such words, could well have increased his sense of guilt by blocking the possibility of turning angrily and self-defensively against an accusatory judge.

The glands secrete copiously, judging from the quantity of dried secretion adhering to them.