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Discover LudwigThe phrase "smothered with" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is covered in a lot of something else, like a topping, and it is used to express an abundance of something. For example, "The pancakes were smothered with melted chocolate and topped with fresh strawberries."
Exact(60)
He was smothered with some of the most flattering media coverage a candidate has ever got.
Christina helped her come up with a convincing hairdo: two braids, smothered with Vaseline.
The floor, in Jon Bausor's design, is smothered with the leaves of upturned books.
Moore held one arm aloft in the familiar gladiator salute while Hurst was smothered with congratulations.
Nor has he been smothered with his new title of respect, "your eminence".
Try the gloppy chili in a chewy bread bowl, smothered with processed cheese and sour cream.
The statue of Eros is usually smothered with tourists, but today it is only lightly coated.
Their chuck steak burgers are encrusted with mustardy bark and smothered with sauces and relishes.
Deep yellow from mustard seeds, appetizer shrimp (ka khaja) came smothered with sweet fragrant onions.
It doesn't matter what they're smothered with; when you hit the meat, it's crummy.
It had generous leather armchairs, a sumptuous velvet sofa and a bed smothered with pillows.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com