Validated
verb (used with object), validated, validating.
1.
to make valid; substantiate; confirm:
Time validated our suspicions.
2.
to give legal force to; legalize.
3.
to give official sanction, confirmation, or approval to, as elected officials, election procedures, documents, etc.:
to validate a passport.
verb (transitive)
1.
to confirm or corroborate
2.
to give legal force or official confirmation to; declare legally valid
Read Also:
- Validating  verb (used with object), validated, validating. 1. to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions. 2. to give legal force to; legalize. 3. to give official sanction, confirmation, or approval to, as elected officials, election procedures, documents, etc.: to validate a passport. verb (transitive) 1. to confirm or corroborate 2. to give legal force […] 
- Validation  verb (used with object), validated, validating. 1. to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions. 2. to give legal force to; legalize. 3. to give official sanction, confirmation, or approval to, as elected officials, election procedures, documents, etc.: to validate a passport. verb (transitive) 1. to confirm or corroborate 2. to give legal force […] 
- Validator  verb (used with object), validated, validating. 1. to make valid; substantiate; confirm: Time validated our suspicions. 2. to give legal force to; legalize. 3. to give official sanction, confirmation, or approval to, as elected officials, election procedures, documents, etc.: to validate a passport. verb (transitive) 1. to confirm or corroborate 2. to give legal force […] 
- Validity  noun 1. the state or quality of being valid: to question the validity of the argument. 2. legal soundness or force. 
- Validly  adjective 1. sound; just; well-founded: a valid reason. 2. producing the desired result; effective: a valid antidote for gloom. 3. having force, weight, or cogency; authoritative. 4. legally sound, effective, or binding; having legal force: a valid contract. 5. Logic. (of an argument) so constructed that if the premises are jointly asserted, the conclusion cannot […] 
