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cape

[ UK /kˈe‍ɪp/ ]
[ US /ˈkeɪp/ ]
NOUN
  1. a sleeveless garment like a cloak but shorter
  2. a strip of land projecting into a body of water

How To Use cape In A Sentence

  • If this approach has a drawback, it is that the zealous pursuit of the founding principle—disinterring the buried life, stamped under the sod by conniving male partners—sometimes obscures the fact that not a great deal gets added to the wider cultural landscape it is bent on illuminating. A Far From Model Marriage
  • The magnificent 18 th-century mansion is set in private landscaped grounds at the edge of the town, opposite the golf links and West Sands but totally screened by trees, woods and 18-foot high lodge gates.
  • Having had some narrow escapes the priest was eventually arrested as a recusant priest and was tried by revolutionary Court.
  • The landscape was colored mainly in dark ocher, with occasional areas in malachite green.
  • They point out that, for customers, obsoleting an investment is not an ‘escape’ but a ‘closed door.’
  • Putting Cape Wind in Nantucket Sound is like putting a refinery in Yellowstone. The Volokh Conspiracy » Cape Wind Approved
  • They all escaped after jumping from the top floor of the burning house thanks to their neighbours' help.
  • A 'the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. David Balfour, a sequel to Kidnapped.
  • Ireland we say 'aitch' that is the Presbyterians do - for some reason which escapes me Catholics say 'haitch' - another argument for integrated education. Behind the scenes at the UK's highest court
  • The gang escaped with a haul worth hundreds of pounds.
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