Your English writing platform
Discover Ludwig"capped of" is not a correct phrase in written English
The correct phrase would be "capped off." This phrase means to finish or complete something in a final way. Example: The winning goal capped off an exciting game for the home team.
Exact(6)
It capped of another superb season for the 28-year-old ball winner who won the inaugural Gary Ayres Medal for the player of the finals series and earned a third All-Australian guernsey Kennedy and Grundy shared their club's award for the best Swans player in the finals.
The stabilization of the MSs in distilled water thanks to the surfaces capped of hydrophilic PVP.
In total, 36,471 households have had their payments capped, of which 17,102 - nearly half- have been in London.
Even Microsoft capped of its big pre-E3 event by teasing an upcoming console upgrade designed specifically to tackle the rigorous hardware requirements that VR presents.
In addition, the microspheres can be well dispersed in various non-polar solvents due to their surfaces capped of hydrophobic surfactants in situ.
This suggests the desirability of a more explicit 'insurance' policy – where either buyer or seller (or both) buys a policy on a transaction that pays nothing if the transaction is satisfactory (eBay profits) but pays a specific schedule (possibly capped) of amounts for each problem or fault in the transaction.
Similar(54)
It capped decades of civic renewal.
"You see the caps of those waves?
Many have an age cap of 75.
He recommended setting a cap of £35,000.
Andrew Dilnot had proposed a cap of around £35,000.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com