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Tiulpan
I want to practice or to practise English?
So I see this often, maybe "to practice English" defines one meaning, and "to practise English" has other meaning that is not equal to the first meaning. Is it right?
2012年6月21日 13:37
回答 · 4
1
Hi!
Practise and Practice have the same meaning so to practice or to practise English are the same
however in many parts of the English speaking world (UK, Ireland, Australia, Canada, and South Africa) “practice” is the noun, “practise” the verb so they don't use practice as a verb they only use it as a noun.(they can't say "to practice English")
2012年6月21日
Hi, Tiulpan.
nice to meet you.
I want to practise my English with you.
please contact me via skype
live:.cid.c370dd894d753b0c
thank you
2021年6月27日
So well, we must write other as I want to improve English skills (but not I want to practise English). That is common mistake that I see who learn English.
2012年6月21日
dehyadjouani is right - certainly for Britain. I can't speak for the other countries. Certain words follow this spelling pattern in British English.
'to practise', 'to advise', 'to license' but 'some practice', 'some advice', 'a licence'.
Of course, in US English 'advise' and 'advice' have the same distinction as in British English - this one is easy because of the pronunciation difference.
2012年6月21日
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Tiulpan
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, ドイツ語, 日本語, ロシア語, スペイン語
言語学習
中国語 (普通話), ドイツ語, 日本語
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