No.
Practiced is a verb.
The present perfect tense of the verb "practice" is "have practiced" or "has practiced."
As a child is the object phrase modifying piano you is the pronoun subject practiced is the verb piano is the direct object.
The word "practiced" can function as either a past tense verb or an adjective in a sentence.
The adverb in this sentence is "regularly". This is an adverb because it describes the verb, which is "practiced".
The correct spelling of the verb is "practice" in American English and "practise" in British English.
The verb in the sentence "As a child practiced piano" is "practiced." It indicates the action being performed by the subject, which is "a child." The sentence suggests that the child is engaged in the activity of playing or rehearsing on the piano.
No, the word "practised" is not an adverb. It is a past tense verb in British English spelling, while "practiced" is the American English spelling. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
The US spelling is practiced (past tense of to practice).The UK spelling is as asked, practised.
In Spanish, you would say "Ayer practiqué." This translates directly to "Yesterday I practiced." The word "ayer" means "yesterday," and "practiqué" is the past tense form of the verb "practicar," meaning "to practice."
Akib Shahjahan Where is euthanasia practiced? It is practiced on: Netherland Belgium ETC
Yes, the word practice is both a verb (practice, practices, practicing, practiced) and a noun (practice, practices). Examples: Verb: Do I have to practice the piano every day? Noun: Yes, practice will make you perfect. Noun: There's a new walk-in medical practice at the mall.