From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishprejudgepre‧judge /ˌpriːˈdʒʌdʒ/ verb [transitive] JUDGEto form an opinion about someone or something before you know or have considered all the facts – used to show disapproval Shepherd’s case was prejudged by the media before her trial. —prejudgment noun [countable, uncountable]→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
prejudge• All of these ideas can be prejudged for the correct answers, which can then be very quickly matched against each entry.• When Justine Moritz was in this prison, the world outside had prejudged her before her trial.• Perhaps I am being prejudged in the same way, if my name is even mentioned outside.• The Institute could not possibly prejudge matters by proclaiming the auditors' innocence from the outset.• It is too easy to prejudge the book as lacking anything of lasting value for sociologists.• If my experience with software has taught me one thing it is this: Never prejudge the product.• Cohen said that he did not wish to prejudge the review.• I'm not going to prejudge those decisions.