certify
confirm to be true; reinforce; certify
Yes. they are still coins
10 coins= 2 fifty cent coins.
quarter+nickel= $0.30, using two coins.
The two largest firms that certify coins are NGC and PCGS.
Coins are certified by services like NGC or PCGS. It is expensive, so it isn't worth it unless the coins are really, really valuable.
Yes, that is the correct spelling of certify.Some example sentences are:We hereby certify you as a fully trained troll hunter.This does not certify you to be an electrician.I will certify your application now.
The past tense of certify is certified.
Could you please certify that?
Certify Data Systems was created in 2004.
The correct spelling is certify. The clerk had to certify the record, to make it official.
Certify is a verb that means to acknowledge as genuine. Thus it can be used in the following possible sentences:I have finished my degree, but am waiting for the university to certify it.If you want to bring a phone into hospital, you will need to get the head of safety to certify it first.I cannot wait for guiness world records to certify my stamp collection.
No, "certify" is not a noun. It is a verb that means to officially confirm or attest that something is true or accurate.
of Certify
On the managing account list, select the account and click the Certify (or Approve) button
Non, "certifier" n'est pas un adverbe, c'est un verbe.