a. colloq. [irreg. f. JUDGE sb. or v. + -matic, in imitation or parody of dogmatic, pragmatic, etc.] = next.

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1819.  ‘A. F. Holstein,’ Miseries of an Heiress, I. 51. Mrs. Moreland smiled at the credulity of her husband, and prided herself upon her own judgmatic powers.

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1835.  Tait’s Mag., II. 575/1. Sufficiently enlightened, so as to make a judgmatic choice.

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1898.  R. Kipling, in Morn. Post, 10 Nov., 5/2. A man of twenty-five years’ sea experience—cool, temperate, and judgmatic, such an one as the ordinary Warrant Officer.

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