validated

intermediateB2

/ˈvælɪˌdeɪtɪd/ · val-i-da-ted

Confirmed or upheld as legitimate or valid.

Meanings

adjectiveformal

Confirmed or upheld as legitimate or valid.

تصدیق شدہ، جو صحیح یا جائز سمجھا جائے۔

تصدیق شدہ

tasdeeq shuda

Formal: تصدیق شدہ

Synonyms

confirmedauthenticatedverifiedتصدیق شدہمعتبردرست

Antonyms

invalidatedrefuteddisprovedباطلمردودغلط

Common Collocations

  • validated results
  • validated data
  • validated documents

Example Sentences

The study provided validated results that support the hypothesis.

تحقیق نے ایسے نتائج فراہم کیے جو نظریے کی حمایت کرتے ہیں۔

Tehqiqat ne aise nataij faraham kiye jo nazariye ki himayat karte hain.

Only validated documents can be accepted for the application.

صرف تصدیق شدہ دستاویزات درخواست کے لیے قبول کی جا سکتی ہیں۔

Sirf tasdeeq shuda dastawaizat darkhwast ke liye qabool ki ja sakti hain.

The team worked to ensure all data was validated before the final report.

ٹیم نے آخری رپورٹ سے پہلے تمام ڈیٹا کی تصدیق یقینی بنانے کے لیے کام کیا۔

Team ne aakhri report se pehle tamam data ki tasdeeq yaqini banane ke liye kaam kiya.

Easily Confused With

validated vs. invalidated:Validated means confirmed, while invalidated means rejected or deemed invalid.

Word Family

validate
verbتصدیق کرنا
validation
nounتصدیق
validator
nounتصدیق کنندہ

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Think of 'validate' as 'verify the date' to remember it confirms legitimacy.

Imagine a stamp of approval on a document to represent validation.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

تصدیق کی خاطر ہم نے کیں منزلیں طے، کتابوں میں چھپے ہیں جو رازِ وفا میرے۔

Tasdeeq ki khatir hum ne keen manzilen tay, Kitabon mein chhupay hain jo raaz-e-wafa mere.

For validation, we traversed many destinations, Hidden in books are the secrets of loyalty, my dear.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

چور کی عمر کتنی، مگر کسی دن پکڑے گا۔

Chor ki umar kitni, magar kisi din pakray ga.

How long can a thief last? He will be caught one day.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "validatus" — made strong or valid

First known use: 19th century

The word 'validated' comes from the Latin 'validare,' which means to make strong or to confirm. It evolved in English to mean confirming the accuracy or legitimacy of something.