Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - You can't judge a book by its cover.

You can't judge a book by its cover.

Never judge by appearances.

judge

English [d]? d? ] ? Beauty [d? d? ] ?

Judge; Judge; Referee; Judge; Appraiser; judge

Verb (abbreviation of verb) judgment; Summarize; Thinking; Estimate and guess (size, quantity, etc.); Referee; Judge; Act as a referee.

It? Is it? Does it matter? Where to? Judge? That? Weight? Yes? Yours Washing? Load? Is that correct?

It is important to estimate the weight of clothes correctly.

Extended data:

Usage of judges:

Judgment can refer to "judgment", which means that people judge others [things and things] according to their own logical thinking. Judge can be used as an intransitive verb or a transitive verb. When used as a transitive verb, it can be followed by nouns, pronouns or infinitives with interrogative words, or by that clause and interrogative word clauses. Can be used for passive structures.

Judge can also be followed by infinitive, prepositional phrase or "(to be+) n./adj." as the compound object of complement. The infinitive used as the object complement of judge may or may not take to. When the time indicated by the infinitive of the verb precedes the time indicated by judge, the perfect form of the infinitive is applied, and to cannot be omitted.

Judge is followed by a verb infinitive as an object, and when an adjective or noun is used as a complement, the structure of formal object is generally adopted, that is, it is a formal object, and the real object verb infinitive is placed after the complement.

Judge can be followed by the preposition by or from, which means "make a judgment according to". There is no difference in meaning between the two. The subject of the clause guided by judge by [from] is not necessarily the same as the subject of the sentence.