A golfer with a recent victory will automatically qualify for the tournament.
Before starting work on the project, Ben had to qualify as a safety engineer.
With the election near, the senator decided to qualify his earlier support for the bill.
I will qualify for that school.
He hoped to qualify for the team. The scientist was trying to qualify the data.
The word qualify, or more properly to qualify, is a verb.
I can qualify for university any time I want.
There is a high probability that this sentence will not qualify as a good sentence.
The suffixes of the word "qualify" are -ed, -es, and -ing.
The word qualify, or more properly to qualify, is a verb.
This is called a "sentence fragment" or an "incomplete sentence."
First of all, "data that proves the results of the experiment" is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment. It is part of a statement, not a complete statement. Secondly, it consists of 8 words. Your question "what is the word" does not make sense. Every one of those 8 words is a word. They all qualify equally.
The root word for "qualified" is "qualify," which comes from the Latin word "qualis," meaning "of what kind" or "of such kind."
Words that can be made from the letters in 'qualify' are:aailfailflayfluflyIiflayquailquay
This is a phrase, not a sentence. It lacks any sort of verb or predicate to qualify it as a sentence.