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Judgmentsthat

Judgmentsthat is not a defined term in philosophy or linguistics; rather, it is the written sequence of words that results when a speaker or writer uses the phrase judgments that to introduce a subordinate clause describing a particular assessment, belief, or evaluation. In ordinary usage, the construction functions to specify which judgments are being referred to and to present the content of those judgments as propositions.

In English grammar, that-clause complements commonly follow verbs of thinking, believing, judging, claiming, and reporting. Examples

Semantically, judgments introduced by that-clauses express propositional content that can be true or false and may

Usage notes include awareness that that-clauses can affect perceived objectivity, especially in evaluative or persuasive writing.

include:
I
believe
that
the
proposal
will
succeed,
she
judged
that
the
evidence
was
insufficient,
and
the
committee
reported
that
the
terms
were
acceptable.
The
that
clause
can
often
be
omitted
in
informal
contexts:
I
believe
the
proposal
will
succeed.
The
use
of
that
clarifies
the
content
of
the
judgment
and
helps
distinguish
the
judgment
from
other
sentences
about
the
same
subject.
be
hedged
or
qualified
by
adverbs
and
adjectives
(e.g.,
apparently,
clearly,
likely).
The
construction
is
central
to
discourse
when
recounting
opinions,
diagnoses,
decisions,
or
rulings.
In
philosophy
and
logic,
judgments
are
analyzed
as
mental
or
assertoric
acts,
and
that-clauses
are
the
linguistic
vehicles
for
their
content.
Overreliance
on
hedges
or
excessive
qualification
can
undermine
clarity.
See
also
complement
clause,
reported
speech,
and
propositional
attitude
verbs.