Actually,
Practice is a noun. Practise is a verb.
Ie.
You must go to the medical practice.
You must practise.
A dangerous goods code is when a product may harm you in some way therefore needing a code of practise written after it concerning your safety.
lawyer or attorney- synonym- both practice law
A working practice is one or more procedures that you use when accomplishing you job assignment.
Every industry has a code of practice that relates to it, such as insurance and health. A certain industry must be named in order to find its personal code of practice.
The advantages of using best fit and best practice in HR relations is that the philosophies can increase the skills of the employees. Best fit and best practice methodologies allows workers to perform at optimum levels.
Practice is the noun. Practise is the verb. "I have to leave my law practice for a couple of days to practise for the baseball tournament."
Practice and practise are homophones.
Practice is a noun. Practise is a verb. Ie. You need more practice. You must practise. Unless you are writing American English, in which case it's always "practice." But, what if you're British and the contest has a practice/practise round?
I practise = practico (from 'practicar' to practise)
practise
Practice.... practice practise practise... :) good luck with the exam... love the mysterious Guru! xoxo
Practice is American English; practise is British English.
The correct spelling is Practice. Many people confuse it with practise which is a wrong word.
its working well in a practise enviroment
In American English, practice. I believe British English spells it practise.Answer In British and Australian usage, practice is a noun, practise is a verb. In the question "practise" is used correctly as a verb.
"Practise "is" a verb" - how I remember it.In U.S. English, practice is both the noun and the verb.
At the time of practise v do excerise , warmup . Jokeing passing practise all tht happens in football