capitalised in English

verb
1
take the chance to gain advantage from.
an attempt by the opposition to capitalize on the government's embarrassment
2
provide (a company or industry) with capital.
a highly capitalized industry
3
realize (the present value of an income); convert into capital.
In this connection ‘fund’, I take it, ordinarily means money set aside and invested, the surplus income therefrom being capitalised .
4
write or print (a word or letter) in capital letters.
I also learned how to correctly identify the beginning of a sentence, target the first word, and capitalize the first letter (make the letter bigger than the rest).
verb

Use "capitalised" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "capitalised" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "capitalised", or refer to the context using the word "capitalised" in the English Dictionary.

1. Gentlemen... why is this word capitalised?

2. We capitalised our assets to avoid bankruptcy.

3. Any interest accruing on the amount transferred into the account will be capitalised.

4. If you capitalised a word, you use a capital letter at the beginning or for the whole of it.

5. The sky looked terrifyingly cool so I capitalised in the Beigest outfit imaginable, and yes

6. Societies are still very strongly capitalised, according to figures from the Building Society Commission, the industry regulator.

7. Synonyms for Cashed in include banked, realised, realized, redeemed, sold, traded in, Cashed out, Cashed up, capitalised and capitalized

8. Capitalise (third-person singular simple present Capitalises, present participle capitalising, simple past and past participle Capitalised) Non- Oxford British English standard spelling of capitalize .

9. Said bin Sultan of Muscat capitalised on this opportunity and raided the Wahhabi garrisons on the eastern coast, setting fire to the fort in Zubarah.

10. That would require that foreign subsidiaries be independently capitalised, which may also be necessary for a cross-border bank to have a credible "living will", a guide to its orderly resolution.

11. Bridewell (plural Bridewells) (Sometimes capitalised) (dated in Britain, rare elsewhere) A small prison, or a police station that has cells.2002, Joseph O'Conner, Star of the Sea, Vintage 2003, p

12. The average customer term is seven years and the entity Amortises the capitalised contract costs over seven years because it expects to receive the economic benefits over the seven year term, which includes the two anticipated one-year renewal periods