0 past simple and past participle of prejudge
1 to form an opinion about a situation or a person before knowing or considering all of the facts:
But the requisite set of concepts should not be prejudged.
If a case was not necessarily judged purely on its merits in the antebellum period, neither was it prejudged before it came to court.
I am no cynic, but it certainly gave me the impression that the issue had already been prejudged.
I do not think it should be prejudged.
I said that the question was not prejudged for the future.
To have prejudged its recommendations by setting up the building of the structure in my judgment would not have been realistic.
We have not prejudged any of these issues.
We were told the principle was already prejudged.