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Alaa
What is the difference between "practise" and "practice"?
4 de jul. de 2016 22:00
Respuestas · 8
6
In British English, we change the spelling depending on whether it’s a noun (practice) or a verb (to practise). This is similar to the noun ‘advice’ and the verb ‘to advise’. In American English, no such distinction is made. It’s simply ‘practice’ and ‘to practice’.
4 de julio de 2016
4
'Practise' is a verb: : He is practising his English.
'Practice' is a noun: His football practice starts at 3 o'clock.
The two words 'practice' and 'practise' are pronounced the same.
Note that American English doesn't follow this rule, and spells both the noun and the verb with a 'c'.
4 de julio de 2016
3
Hello Alaa,
The parts of speech of these two words are different in British English. "Practice" is a noun whereas "practise" is a verb.
E.g: I love to practise English. (Verb) British
I take ours of practice to learn English. (Noun) British
But we use "practice" for both verb and noun in American English, and the spelling doesn't change.
E.g: I love to practice English. (Verb) American
I take ours of practice to learn English. (Noun) American
Hope this helps.
5 de julio de 2016
1
"Practise" is British English, "Practice" is American. Brits use Ss where Americans use Cs.
4 de julio de 2016
I see, Thanks :)
26 de junio de 2017
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Alaa
Competencias lingüísticas
Árabe, Árabe (egipcio), Inglés, Alemán
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés, Alemán
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