Similar words: snow-capped, tapped, whipped, stepped, equipped, escaped, worshipped, appeal. Meaning: [kæp] adj. 1. used especially of front teeth having artificial crowns 2. covered as if with a cap or crown especially of a specified kind.
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91. There is no evidence to suggest that the chimney was capped deliberately to cause carbon monoxide poisoning.
92. Thereafter, every night after dinner, I heard the music from below, capped by the singing of the popular songs.
93. The council must save a million pounds after being charge capped by the Government.
94. Irkutsk acquired a massive station, with two central towers capped by domes and larger corner blocks with connecting wings.
95. Nearly half of all local councils face being capped.
96. Her umbrella is capped with a glass knob.
97. This reasoning should be capped by an experimental finding.
98. Whipped cream capped the dessert.
99. Out-of-pocket expenses also would be capped.
100. There are two types of partition modes—capped and uncapped.
101. Beyond these snow - capped mountains lies Rome!
102. He capped the bottle after having some root beer.
103. They had capped the roof with plywood.
104. Regulations that capped the working hours of bleary-eyed young doctors came just five years ago,(www.Sentencedict.com) limiting them to about 80 hours a week.
105. Contractor's liability is limited to a reasonable level, with its aggregate liability under the contract and the liquidated damages capped, and normally excluding consequential damage.
106. It capped off a phenomenal year for Firth, who won practically every award out there for playing George VI's attempts to overcome his stuttering before he assumes the throne of England.
107. Macroscopically the appearance of an osteochondroma is of a sessile or pedunculated mass capped with cartilage.
108. The new law have capped the crabbing season in our are nota.
109. It was last down 0.7 percent at $1.4869, with a session low of $1.4809, after rising as high as $1.5015 on Monday, where traders said profit-taking and options-related selling capped its rise.
110. Today, the Central Sikh Temple is an imposing building, capped by an impressive dome.
111. "It looks like we're stuck in this trading range, with the downside around 1,040 to 1,050 and upside capped by the 50-day moving average, which right now is around 1,127," he said.
112. This season two Bolton players have been capped by England, Gary Cahill and Kevin Davies, in the same season for the first time since 1959 when Eddie Hopkinson, Ray Parry and Doug Holden appeared.
113. All of which may seem overgenerous, particularly since the state's voting rights will be capped at 75% of the total—less than its likely financial stake in the business.
114. From the idyllic beaches of Abel Tasman National Park, to the snow capped mountains of the Southern Alps, New Zealand's South Island offers a wealth of beautiful and diverse scenery.
115. It contained the correct set of equations that capped 6 theory of general relativity.
116. Visible in the above spectacular panorama are the San Francisco Peaks capped by a lenticular cloud.
117. The sporophyte body comprises a long stalk, called a seta, and a capsule capped by a cap called the operculum.
118. Partitions in the shared processing pool can have a sharing mode of capped or uncapped.
119. Protect ends with capped self-locking washers incorporating a spring steel insert to ensure permanent retention of cap in exposed locations.
120. I assume this question has arisen due to the fact that Angel and I capped off our wedding guest list at around 110 people and didn't invite many of our current colleagues.
More similar words: snow-capped, tapped, whipped, stepped, equipped, escaped, worshipped, appeal, flapper, wrapper, appear, happen, whipped cream, appease, reappear, appetite, happen to, appeal to, appendix, appendage, appetizer, appeasing, happening, appealing, disappear, appearance, appeasement, appellation, apperception, happenstance.