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Andyw12345 Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

practice vs. practise...

0Hi guys,02br
02br
00Is the below use of practice, as opposed to practise, correct?02br
02br
00...put this learning into practice 02br
02br
02br
00 0-
  

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12 Answers
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0I believe they're identical, "practise" being British.0-
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Andyw1234512cite12br
10Hi guys,12br
12br
10Is the below use of practice, as opposed to practise, correct?12br
12br
10...put this learning into practice 12br
12br
10Many thanks in 10 advance!12br
12br
11i10put this learning into 11
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0Thanks for the correction, Yoong. I completely missed that "practise" is only a verb. - A.0-
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0Thanks guys so '00put this learning into practice' is correct? 02br
02br
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0Yes, It's correct in both BrE and AmE.0-
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0Thanks very much guys :-)0-
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Absolutely correct.
In England, Australia and New Zealand, practice with a `c' is a noun and practise with an `s' is the verb. An easy way to figure out which one to use is to substitute the words `advice' (noun) or `advise' (verb) for practice/practise. Simple.
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that was inordinately helpful.... i've finally cracked it, cheers
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Practice is the noun, practise is the verb

"The only thing Dean didn't like about piano practice was practising his scales."
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Not true practise is not bristish, in canada, australia and UK both practise and practice should be used. one is a verb and one is a noun

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