Umpire vs Abjudicate - What's the difference?
umpire | abjudicate |
(tennis) The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair.
(cricket) One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match.
(baseball) One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game.
(American football) The official who stands behind the line on the defensive side.
(Australian rules football) A match official on the ground deciding and enforcing the rules during play. As of 2007 the Australian Football League uses 3, or in the past 2 or just 1. The other officials, the goal umpires and boundary umpires, are normally not called just umpires alone.
(legal) A person who arbitrates between contending parties
(sports) To act as an umpire in a game.
To decide as an umpire; to arbitrate; to settle (a dispute, etc.).
* South
(legal) To reject by judicial sentence.
To abjudge.
In lang=en terms the difference between umpire and abjudicate
is that umpire is a person who arbitrates between contending parties while abjudicate is to reject by judicial sentence.As verbs the difference between umpire and abjudicate
is that umpire is to act as an umpire in a game while abjudicate is to reject by judicial sentence.As a noun umpire
is the official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair.umpire
English
(wikipedia umpire)Noun
(en noun)- The umpire called the pitch a strike.
- The umpire must keep on his toes as the play often occurs around him.
Usage notes
* In general, a referee moves around with the game, while an umpire stays (approximately) in one place.Verb
(umpir)- Judges appointed to umpire the matter in contest between them, and to decide where the right lies.
