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Discover Ludwig"be capped with" is a correct phrase and can be used in written English.
It means to be covered or topped with something, usually referring to the top of something. Example: The mountain was capped with snow, giving it a picturesque appearance.
Exact(37)
The course will be capped with a final collaborative project.
First, it would be capped with a plastic liner covered with dirt.
The bucolic day can be capped with more of the same: dinner at Fauna in Aquebogue.
Hair is granted a particularly free pass, with everyday outfits allowed to be capped with a bobble hat.
This graded layer may or may not be capped with a layer of TiCN with fixed composition.
Mrs. Clinton's three-day campaign and fund-raising schedule will be capped with a prime-time speech to the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles on Monday.
Similar(23)
They are capped with gold.
Each end is capped with a turned finial of ivory.
The heterostructure is capped with 100 nm thick InGaAs layer.
The account was capped with a bright, exuberant finale.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy showed that the nanoparticles were capped with plant bioactive molecules.
More suggestions(19)
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be constrained with
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be approximated with
be overlapped with
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com