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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a capitalise" is not correct in English.
It seems to be a confusion between "capitalize" as a verb and "capital" as a noun.
Example: "Please capitalize the first letter of each sentence."
Alternatives: "a capital letter" or "capitalize the first letter".
Exact(1)
Do you a) capitalise on the love people are showing your product and license the game for a minimal fee?
Similar(59)
If that collaboration could be seen as a bid to capitalise on a younger, hipper customer, by contrast Willoughby is gunning for a different crowd.
Across the U.S., an estimated 90,000 people and 25,000 horses involved in a trade capitalised at $28 million $660 millionn in 2010 terms).
Running with a slogan of Join up for a Change, Piñera capitalised on a widespread conviction that the government was being run by a cadre of political hacks.
"There's a chance for Truro and Cornwall as a whole to capitalise on this," Masters told BBC Radio Cornwall.
A properly capitalised business bank with borrowing powers is urgently needed.
Liberty showed a collection capitalising on the recent return to favour of its traditional floral prints.
These could capitalise a fund that makes annual payouts.
The Japanese fashion retailer Beams launched a store to capitalise on the multi-generation landscape.
For instance, it did not use money in long-dormant bank accounts to capitalise a "social investment bank".
"There's no doubt we were ill-prepared, as a game, to capitalise on that epoch-making success," concludes Hopley.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com