Qualify in a sentence as a verb

Would pointing people to medical research papers [qualify]?

As developers, entrepreneurs, etc., shouldn't we be nurturing this very hard to qualify talent?

You believe that there's some mythical "21st century" business model that will save journalism with no evidence to back that up. If asking readers to pay for news doesn't qualify as sufficiently modern, I'm really not sure what you have in mind.

One day her family advised him that they had arranged a marriage for her and as she was no longer living with them she and her new husband would both qualify for unemployment benefits.

It's the kind of language a lawyer would use to qualify a patent clause.- We do not provide direct access to our servers.- We do not provide direct access nor is there a backdoor.- O, but we do still pipe all of your data to external NSA servers.

The only reason I got a good education was because with the release of Nelson Mandela, my parents were one of few to study at a previously white only university, and qualify for positions previously reserved for whites only.

The substantive law rules relating to such options are the same as any other options and they are "non-qualified" only in the sense that they don't qualify for the special tax advantage of "incentive stock options" or ISOs, which are special types of options that get special tax advantages.

Qualify definitions

verb

prove capable or fit; meet requirements

verb

pronounce fit or able; "She was qualified to run the marathon"; "They nurses were qualified to administer the injections"

verb

make more specific; "qualify these remarks"

See also: restrict

verb

make fit or prepared; "Your education qualifies you for this job"

See also: dispose

verb

specify as a condition or requirement in a contract or agreement; make an express demand or provision in an agreement; "The will stipulates that she can live in the house for the rest of her life"; "The contract stipulates the dates of the payments"

See also: stipulate condition specify

verb

describe or portray the character or the qualities or peculiarities of; "You can characterize his behavior as that of an egotist"; "This poem can be characterized as a lament for a dead lover"

See also: characterize characterise

verb

add a modifier to a constituent

See also: modify