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Verificata

Verificata is an Italian term that functions as an adjective and as the feminine past participle of verificare, meaning "verified" or "fact-checked." It is used to describe feminine nouns or to indicate that information, documents, or measurements have undergone formal verification.

Etymology and grammar: Verificare is a Romance verb derived from Latin roots related to truth, with verus

Usage: In Italian writing, verificata commonly appears in contexts such as journalism, research, and administration to

Contexts and nuance: The term emphasizes formal verification or validation. It does not inherently imply universal

See also: verificare, verifica, verification, verifiable, fact-checking. Notes: use the appropriate gender form—verificata for feminine nouns

meaning
true
and
facere
meaning
to
make
or
do.
The
past
participle
verificato
(masculine)
or
verificata
(feminine)
agrees
in
gender
with
the
noun
it
modifies,
and
the
plural
forms
are
verificati
and
verificati
(masculine)
or
verificate
(feminine).
signal
that
a
claim
or
item
has
been
checked
for
accuracy.
Examples
include
la
notizia
verificata,
l’informazione
verificata,
or
il
documento
verificato.
In
modern
media
and
fact-checking
workflows,
you
may
encounter
phrases
like
contenuto
verificato
or
fonte
verificata,
though
labeling
practices
vary
by
outlet.
truth
beyond
the
verification
process;
it
reflects
that
an
item
was
examined
and
confirmed
against
defined
criteria
at
a
given
time.
Verificata
can
appear
in
both
formal
documents
and
public
communication
to
convey
reliability,
but
it
is
not
a
brand
or
standardized
certification
in
itself.
and
verificato
for
masculine
nouns.