This list includes 2 Prepositions that start with J, from “judging by” to “judging from”. Both are common multi-word prepositional phrases used to infer or judge, often in spoken and written English.

Prepositions are words or phrases that link nouns, pronouns, or clauses to other sentence parts. Phrases like “judging by” and “judging from” come from the verb “judge”, rooted in Latin “judicare”, and introduce evidence.

Below you’ll find the table with [COLUMN_NAMES]

Preposition: You see the single word or phrase here, so you can quickly identify the entry.

Definition: Concise meaning of the preposition, giving clear sense in simple language for quick understanding.

Common pairings: Typical collocations or complements you will see with the preposition, listed as short phrases.

Example sentence: One clear sentence showing natural use, so you can copy or adapt it.

Usage notes: Brief tags on register, region, or rarity to help you choose the proper form.

Prepositions that start with J

PrepositionTypeMeaningCommon pairings
judging bymulti-wordaccording to evidence or appearancethe evidence, his tone, the results
judging frommulti-wordbased on available information or evidencethe reports, the early signs, these figures

Descriptions

judging by
A participial prepositional phrase meaning “according to”; common in informal and formal writing to indicate inference from observed signs.
judging from
Similar to “judging by”; used as a prepositional phrase to introduce conclusions drawn from information or signs.
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