Langimage
English

randomly-judged

|ran-dom-ly-judged|

C1

/ˈrændəmli ˈdʒʌdʒd/

unpredictable evaluation

Etymology
Etymology Information

'randomly-judged' originates from the combination of 'randomly' and 'judged'. 'Randomly' comes from 'random', which has roots in Old French 'randir', meaning 'to gallop', and 'judged' comes from Latin 'judicare', meaning 'to judge'.

Historical Evolution

'Randomly' evolved from the Old French 'randir', and 'judged' from Latin 'judicare', eventually forming the modern English term 'randomly-judged'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'randomly' meant 'without a specific pattern', and 'judged' meant 'to form an opinion'. Together, they evolved to mean 'evaluated without a specific pattern'.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

evaluated or assessed without a specific pattern or criteria, often implying a lack of fairness or consistency.

The competition was randomly-judged, leading to unexpected results.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/05/23 14:00