0 past simple and past participle of adjudge
1 to announce a decision or consider something, especially officially:
[ + to infinitive ] Half an hour into the game Paterson was adjudged to have fouled Jackson and was sent off.
[ + noun/adj ] He was adjudged bankrupt by the court.
Fairbanks was adjudged the winner.
For the first half of the stimulus (initial syllables), serial position was adjudged in terms of left to right serial position.
I argue - if a community is adjudged desirable by its composition, it should be allowed to express its creativity in various manners, including fragmentation.
If serial position was merely adjudged from right to left, no such credit could be given.
For the syllables in the second half of the stimulus (final syllables), serial position was adjudged in terms of right to left serial position.
But it applies equally to any output-oriented analysis in which candidate forms with non-core syllabification are adjudged more optimal than those with core syllabification.
So far, this has generally been adjudged a triumph, although it hasn't fed the poorest, and the final environmental verdict is far from in.
No influence is adjudged to the structural relation between a trigger word and the adjoining word.
They are, however, likely to leave unchanged negative structural and cultural factors which will have a wider influence than on individuals adjudged to be 'at risk'.