Capstone in a sentence as a noun

My argument for it being a capstone stems not at all from that it's too hard.

My senior capstone in college on the other hand definitely did help me gain some of those skills.

My last semester of college, our capstone course saw me at the head of a team of 5 CS students building a video game.

Recently they announced that they have partnered with SwiftKey [2] for the final capstone project.

It's pretty common in Europe to write a bachelor's thesis as the capstone of an undergraduate degree.

If probability and statistics replaced calculus as the high school capstone class, this country would be a much better place.

The Common Lisp standard is the capstone on an unusually long and fractured history of development.

In that sense the marriage is a capstone, but there is no difference between that couple and a couple that got married right away and have been together for 8 years.

The capstone project is our attempt at including something more practical, but it's self-directed, so that's not exactly what you are after.

It's great to see my school doing this, but looking at it doesn't seem very different from the senior design/capstone projects that many of the technical majors have already.

I applied them during my capstone unit at uni; my team delivered 92% of agreed functionality on-time with no significant defects.

Who would have known my undergraduate capstone project would be so relevant?To improve accuracy of Nerf Blasters, we realized that barrel rifling had little effect.

I'd recommend reworking this chapter so either it's at the end and is a capstone on "idiomatic" ruby style, or ditch the convoluted examples and keep it simple.

And unlike many other civil service jobs, a judgeship is a capstone to a career so it's not like judges use the judgeship as a stepping-stone to a lucrative private-sector position.

Pay Universities for thorough certification of knowledge for particular subjects, and finally join Universities for capstone activities which will grant degrees upon completion.

The capstone course at my university, like many others, was to be matched up with someone in the community and be given an actual task from their business, usually with the understanding that we were likely to produce such crappy code that it was going to be discarded anyhow.

Capstone definitions

noun

a final touch; a crowning achievement; a culmination

See also: copestone

noun

a stone that forms the top of wall or building

See also: copestone stretcher