Verified means that the item is checked. If it is checked and passed, then it is verified.
you have been approved and your phone will ship shortly
No, verify (verifies, verifying, verified) is a verb. The noun form is verification.
I have verified that you do not know how to use verified in a sentence.
"Yet to be confirmed" could mean a transaction has not yet been approved. It could also mean information has not been verified or authenticated.
If you read the sentence, 'were' modifies both 'set' and 'verified'. Set and verified are the 2 verbs.
It means you have proof that you have insurance and it can be verified.
idetified,located
I think you are asking of the word "verified".
true verified
The word verified means that something is accurate or true. To verify something, it is checked out and is found to be the truth through a reliable and real source.
This may depend on the jurisdiction, but in California a verified answer is a responsive pleading which is accompanied by a declaration, signed under penalty of perjury, that attests that the contents of the answer are true. Normally, a verified answer is only required in cases where there is a verified complaint (although there are other situations where a verified answer is required as against a public entity).
The word suggested by the spelling is "audited" (checked, verified).
No, it is not. To be an adverb a word must describe an action. You cannot use verify in this way. Verify can be a verb, as in 'He verified the information,' or an adjective as 'verified documents.'
It means that you havent verified it yet
They are not verified because they did not do what they needed to do to be verified.
Empirical means verified or provable by means of observation or experiment
you have been approved and your phone will ship shortly