Predicate: judge
judge: Frames file for 'judge' based on sentences in wsj. Verbnet entry 29.4.
Roleset id: judge.01 , make a judgement, vncls: 29.4 29.2 34.2, framnet:
judge.01: Perhaps this last one should be split into a separate roleset
('believe'), but I'd rather not. It still fits (albeit somewhat
awkwardly) into this one.
Roles:
        Arg0: judge (vnrole: 29.4-Agent, 29.2-Agent, 34.2-Agent)
        Arg1: judged (vnrole: 29.4-Theme, 29.2-Theme, 34.2-Theme)
        Arg2: judgement, attribute of arg1 (vnrole: 29.4-Predicate, 29.2-Predicate)
        Arg3: on what grounds
Example: discourse usage
        person: ns,  tense: ns,  aspect: progressive,  voice: ns,  form: participle
        *trace* Judging from the Americana in Haruki Murakami's ``A Wild
        Sheep Chase'' Kodansha, 320 pages, $18.95, baby boomers on both
        sides of the Pacific have a lot in common.
        Arg0: *trace*
        Rel: Judging
        Arg3: from the Americana in Haruki Murakami's ``A
Wild Sheep Chase'' Kodansha, 320 pages, $18.95
Example: grounds and subject
        person: ns,  tense: future,  aspect: ns,  voice: passive,  form: participle
        Earlier this week, Dr. Sullivan tried to defuse these charges by
        stressing that [candidates to head the NIH and the CDC]-1 will be
        judged *trace*-1 by ``standards of scientific and administrative
        excellence,'' not politics.
        ArgM-MOD: will
        Rel: judged
        Arg1: *trace*
        Arg3: by ``standards of scientific and administrative
excellence,'' not politics
Example: just thing judged
        person: ns,  tense: past,  aspect: perfect,  voice: passive,  form: participle
        [None of the grants]-1 had been requested by HUD, judged *trace*-1
        competitively or were the subject of a single hearing.
        Rel: judged
        Arg1: *trace*
        ArgM-MNR: competitively
Example: verbal predicate judgement
        person: ns,  tense: present,  aspect: ns,  voice: active,  form: full
        The implications for Britain, France and the rest of Europe of
        having their currencies tied to the economic policy of a neutral
        country need considering before we judge Mr. Lawson's resignation
        to be unfortunate.
        Arg0: we
        Rel: judge
        Arg1: Mr. Lawson's resignation
        Arg2: to be unfortunate
Example: simple transitive
        person: ns,  tense: ns,  aspect: ns,  voice: active,  form: infinitive
        ``You-1've got *trace*-1 to judge where the network will be in three
        years.''
        Arg0: *trace*
        Rel: judge
        Arg1: where the network will be in three years
Example: lest ye be judged
        person: ns,  tense: present,  aspect: ns,  voice: active,  form: full
        *trace* Judge Not
        Arg0: *trace*
        Rel: Judge
        ArgM-NEG: Not
Example: adjectival predicate judgement
        person: ns,  tense: present,  aspect: ns,  voice: passive,  form: participle
        Baker had bitter experience of bigotry from her St. Louis
        childhood and her days in New York theater, where she-1 was judged
        *trace*-1 too dark for an all-black chorus line performing of course
        for all-white audiences.
        Rel: judged
        Arg1: *trace*
        Arg2: too dark for an all-black chorus line
performing of course for all-white audiences
Example: prepositional judgement
        person: ns,  tense: ns,  aspect: progressive,  voice: active,  form: participle
        He-1 chastises Jo Franklin-Trout for her inept presentation of
        advocacy journalism, *trace*-1 judging her project as
        ``intellectually slipshod.''
        Arg0: *trace*
        Rel: judging
        Arg1: her project
        Arg2: as ``intellectually slipshod
Example: missing subject of judgement
        person: ns,  tense: present,  aspect: ns,  voice: active,  form: full
        Consider, for example, the greenhouse effect and climate change;
        numerous blue-ribbon scientific committees, including one from
        the National Academy of Science, judge there is a greater than
        50% probability of a grave problem in the offing.
        Arg0: numerous blue-ribbon scientific committees,
including one from the National Academy of Science,
        Rel: judge
        Arg2: there is a greater than 50% probability of a grave
problem in the offing