Langimage
English

inadvertently-judged

|in-ad-ver-tent-ly-judged|

C1

🇺🇸

/ˌɪnədˈvɜrtəntli-dʒʌdʒd/

🇬🇧

/ˌɪnədˈvɜːtəntli-dʒʌdʒd/

unintentional judgment

Etymology
Etymology Information

'inadvertently-judged' originates from the combination of 'inadvertently' and 'judged'. 'Inadvertently' comes from Latin 'inadvertentem', meaning 'unintentional', and 'judged' from Latin 'judicare', meaning 'to judge'.

Historical Evolution

'inadvertently' changed from the Latin 'inadvertentem' to the modern English 'inadvertently', and 'judged' from Latin 'judicare' to the modern English 'judged'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'inadvertently' meant 'unintentional', and 'judged' meant 'to form an opinion'. Together, they evolved to describe an unintentional judgment.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

describes a situation where a judgment was made unintentionally or without deliberate intent.

The artist felt inadvertently-judged by the critics' harsh reviews.

Synonyms

unintentionally-assessedaccidentally-evaluated

Antonyms

deliberately-judgedintentionally-assessed

Last updated: 2025/07/16 03:35