C1 adjective Formal

underjudible

/ˌʌndərˈdʒʌdʒəbl/

Describing something that cannot be adequately assessed or evaluated because it lacks sufficient detail, evidence, or falls below the necessary threshold for judgment. It is typically used in technical or formal contexts to indicate that a standard of measurement cannot be applied.

Ejemplos

3 de 5
1

The subtle differences between the two prototypes were underjudible without high-precision instruments.

The subtle differences between the two prototypes were underjudible without high-precision instruments.

2

The board concluded that the applicant's prior experience was underjudible due to the lack of verifiable references.

The board concluded that the applicant's prior experience was underjudible due to the lack of verifiable references.

3

I couldn't really tell if the movie was good or bad; the sound quality was so poor it was basically underjudible.

I couldn't really tell if the movie was good or bad; the sound quality was so poor it was basically underjudible.

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
underjudgability
Verb
underjudge
Adverbio
underjudibly
Adjetivo
underjudible
Relacionado
judgment
💡

Truco para recordar

Break it into three parts: 'Under' (below) + 'Jud' (judge) + 'ible' (able). It is something that stays 'under' the level where you are 'able' to 'judge' it.

Quiz rápido

The evidence presented in the first trial was so disorganized that the motive remained _______.

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: underjudible

Ejemplos

1

The subtle differences between the two prototypes were underjudible without high-precision instruments.

everyday

The subtle differences between the two prototypes were underjudible without high-precision instruments.

2

The board concluded that the applicant's prior experience was underjudible due to the lack of verifiable references.

formal

The board concluded that the applicant's prior experience was underjudible due to the lack of verifiable references.

3

I couldn't really tell if the movie was good or bad; the sound quality was so poor it was basically underjudible.

informal

I couldn't really tell if the movie was good or bad; the sound quality was so poor it was basically underjudible.

4

In this specific psychological study, the participants' emotional responses were deemed underjudible because of external interference.

academic

In this specific psychological study, the participants' emotional responses were deemed underjudible because of external interference.

5

The ROI for the marketing campaign is currently underjudible as we are only in the first week of implementation.

business

The ROI for the marketing campaign is currently underjudible as we are only in the first week of implementation.

Familia de palabras

Sustantivo
underjudgability
Verb
underjudge
Adverbio
underjudibly
Adjetivo
underjudible
Relacionado
judgment

Colocaciones comunes

deemed underjudible considered impossible to judge
remain underjudible stay in a state where judgment isn't possible
underjudible criteria standards that cannot be evaluated
largely underjudible mostly impossible to assess
technically underjudible impossible to judge from a technical standpoint

Frases Comunes

rendered underjudible

made impossible to judge

an underjudible quantity

an amount too small or vague to measure

fall into the underjudible category

to be classified as something that cannot be assessed

Se confunde a menudo con

underjudible vs unjudgeable

Unjudgeable often implies a moral or ethical refusal to judge, whereas underjudible implies a technical inability to do so due to lack of data.

underjudible vs underestimated

Underestimated means valued too low, while underjudible means impossible to value at all.

📝

Notas de uso

This word is rare and typically found in specialized testing environments or legal/academic discourse. It emphasizes that the failure to judge is due to the nature of the object or data, not a lack of skill in the judge.

⚠️

Errores comunes

Learners often use 'unjudgeable' in scientific contexts where 'underjudible' would more accurately describe a lack of measurable data.

💡

Truco para recordar

Break it into three parts: 'Under' (below) + 'Jud' (judge) + 'ible' (able). It is something that stays 'under' the level where you are 'able' to 'judge' it.

📖

Origen de la palabra

A modern English formation using the prefix 'under-' (beneath/insufficient) and the Latin-derived 'judicare' (to judge) with the suffix '-able'.

Patrones gramaticales

Used as a predicative adjective (e.g., 'The data is underjudible.') Can be modified by adverbs of degree (e.g., 'highly underjudible')

Quiz rápido

The evidence presented in the first trial was so disorganized that the motive remained _______.

¡Correcto!

La respuesta correcta es: underjudible

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