Langimage
English

systematically-judged

|sys-tem-at-ic-al-ly-judged|

C1

/ˌsɪstəˈmætɪkli ˈdʒʌdʒd/

methodical evaluation

Etymology
Etymology Information

'systematically-judged' originates from the combination of 'systematic' and 'judge', where 'systematic' comes from the Greek 'systēmatikos', meaning 'pertaining to a system', and 'judge' from the Latin 'judicare', meaning 'to decide'.

Historical Evolution

'systematic' evolved from the Greek 'systēmatikos' through Latin and Old French, while 'judge' transformed from the Latin 'judicare' through Old French 'jugier', eventually becoming the modern English 'judge'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'systematic' meant 'pertaining to a system', and 'judge' meant 'to decide'. Together, they evolved to mean 'evaluated in an organized manner'.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

evaluated or assessed in a methodical and organized manner.

The project was systematically-judged to ensure fairness.

Synonyms

methodically-assessedorganized-evaluated

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/05/23 14:21