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acreditáis

Acreditáis is the second-person plural present indicative form of the Spanish verb acreditar, used with the vosotros pronoun. It means you all credit, certify, or establish something as true or credible. The sense can range from granting official recognition of qualifications to asserting the truth of a claim or providing credentials that authorize someone or something.

Usage and regional notes: Acreditáis is common in Spain and other regions that use the vosotrOs form.

Semantic range: Acreditar can mean to give credit or recognition to someone’s qualifications, to prove or demonstrate

Etymology: Acreditar derives from Latin accreditare, formed with the prefix ad- and credere (to believe), through

Example contexts: Acreditáis la experiencia necesaria para el puesto. Acreditáis la validez de vuestras afirmaciones ante

In
many
Latin
American
varieties,
the
equivalent
form
is
acreditan,
used
with
ustedes,
or
simply
you
all
as
the
subject.
The
verb
also
appears
in
other
tenses
and
moods,
following
the
standard
-ar
conjugation:
acredito,
acreditas,
acredita,
acreditamos,
acreditáis,
acreditan.
The
present
subjunctive
for
vosotros
is
acreditéis.
something,
or
to
certify
or
authorize
an
institution
or
program.
Because
of
its
broad
sense
of
establishing
credibility,
it
often
occurs
in
official
or
professional
contexts,
educational
settings,
and
statements
of
legitimacy.
medieval
Latin
usage,
with
the
sense
development
toward
granting
credibility
or
official
recognition.
el
comité.
Acreditaréis
las
credenciales
ante
la
universidad
en
cuanto
presentéis
los
documentos.