(To use any word that is not a verb as if it were a verb):
a. 1981 Feb 22, unknown Guardian editor as quoted by William Safire, On Language, in New York Times, pSM3
Haig, in congressional hearings before his confirmatory, paradoxed his auditioners by abnormalling his responds so that verbs were nouned, nouns verbed and adjectives adverbised. He techniqued a new way to vocabulary his thoughts so as to informationally uncertain anybody listening about what he had actually implicationed... .
1985 Oct 13, William Safire, Invasion of the Verb Makers, in San Francisco Chronicle, p19
Others, come to think of it, would also choose verb, with no suffix at all: "Don't verb nouns" is an obvious fumblerule.
1996, Peter Brodie, Never Say Never: Teaching Grammar and Usage, in The English Journal 85(7), p77
You mustn't verb nouns, they remind me piously—as I think of Shakespeare's animal verbs (to shark, to spaniel) and his bodypart verbs (to nose, to fat) and of all the great verbs they have spawned (to beaver, weasel, ferret, buffalo; to stomach, belly, scalp, kneecap).
1997, David. F. Griffiths, Desmond J. Higham, learning LATEX, p8
Nouns should never be verbed.
2005 Oct 5, Jeffrey Mattison, Letters, in The Christian Science Monitor, p8
In English, verbing nouns is okay
2007 Apr 20, Dale Roberts, Rooting out bad language with a unicorn, in The Christian Science Monitor, p20
I nominate for banishment the verbed nouns "dialogue" and "language," as in, "Let's dialogue on this project and then do some languaging about our proposal."
2007 March: Erin McKean, “Redefining the dictionary”, Technology Entertainment Design
Any time you touch a word—you use it in a new context, you give it a new connotation, you verb it—you make the mobile move.
1986: Any noun can be verbed — Dan Davis, describing the creation of bad technical writing.