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capped

[ UK /kˈæpt/ ]
[ US /ˈkæpt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. used especially of front teeth having (artificial) crowns
    capped teeth gave her a beautiful smile
  2. covered as if with a cap or crown especially of a specified kind
    snow-capped peaks
    brown-capped mushrooms
    cloud-capped mountains

How To Use capped In A Sentence

  • The bad weather severely handicapped their performance in the race.
  • A perfect mob of street urchins, loafers, shop-men and bar-keepers who could spare a bit of time, lined up in front of the Palace Hotel and watched the plaid-coated, gray-capped visitors in short knickerbockers and golf stockings puff their pipes around the bar and call for "Porter and h'ale, 'alf and The Transformation of Job A Tale of the High Sierras
  • Winfrey interviewed Cruise at his mountaintop home near Telluride, Colorado, surrounded by the snow-capped Rocky Mountains.
  • The Scotland full-back was capped 57 times during two decades with Celtic.
  • I don't usually watch this soap but on Monday the characters very neatly recapped the last two years of their lives and allowed me to enjoy the high drama without having invested anything at all.
  • The bottles are then capped and placed in the cool cellars of the winery for up to 2 years.
  • Shore bird numbers are declining, he says, particularly among oystercatchers, red-capped dotterels and beach thick-knees.
  • And as far as you know, Mrs Hobbs didn't have much of a social life," Armstrong recapped. FORESTS OF THE NIGHT
  • He'd been working at the local hostel for the handicapped on a voluntary basis.
  • The supporters' club is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year and as a reward Manchester United have agreed to send over two of their most capped players, both English internationals.
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