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certify

/sur-tuh-fahy/US // ˈsɜr təˌfaɪ //UK // (ˈsɜːtɪˌfaɪ) //

核证,证明,认证,核证一下

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    cer·ti·fied, cer·ti·fy·ing.

    • : to attest as certain; give reliable information of; confirm: He certified the truth of his claim.
    • : to testify to or vouch for in writing: The medical examiner will certify his findings to the court.
    • : to guarantee; endorse reliably: to certify a document with an official seal.
    • : to guarantee by writing on its face that the account against which it is drawn has sufficient funds to pay it.
    • : to award a certificate to attesting to the completion of a course of study or the passing of a qualifying examination.
    • : to declare legally insane and committable to a mental institution.
    • : Archaic. to assure or inform with certainty.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    cer·ti·fied, cer·ti·fy·ing.

    • : to give assurance; testify; vouch for the validity of something.

Synonyms & Antonyms

verbdeclare as true
Forms: certified

Examples

  • NASA and Boeing have provided some updates around their Commercial Crew plans, which aim to get Boeing’s CST-100 spacecraft certified for regular human flight.

  • The Cessna 172 debuted in 1955 and the Cessna 208 was FAA certified in 1984.

  • In other cases, confusion over how PUA recipients needed to certify or who qualified for the new aid led to other problems for states.

  • This unit is Energy Star-certified so you can save your pennies while you keep your kitchen clean.

  • The United States’ “adequacy” protection was limited to companies that were certified under the Privacy Shield.

  • In order to withhold the photographs, the secretary of defense must certify that photographs could cause harm to Americans.

  • The FAA will have to certify SpaceShipTwo as airworthy, but there are as yet no protocols in place for that process.

  • The decision to certify the planes and their sensors has been pending since late last year, long before the Ukraine crisis began.

  • The first is how the FAA can certify the craft as safe for passenger flight.

  • The folks from RecordSetter.com were there, the hosts told the hopeful twerkers, to adjudicate and certify the world record.

  • It will also certify that he made the pluckiest and most successful hundred-mile run ever pulled off in the Southwest.

  • As a rule, they certify nothing but the total absence of judgment and conscience in the people who have granted them.

  • I certify this fact, which, besides, formed for me a most convincing truth of the presence of a familiar spirit close about us.

  • Castellan and Biggen, the notaries, certify to a much larger amount in the Three per Cents.

  • I further certify that these memoranda accurately summarize my notes and recollections from these interviews.