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No, you have to go through college and get the degree first......... Nah just kidding, yes you can practice the Scientific Method even without being a scientist. (:
Practice is American English; practise is British English.
Practice if youre American.
Jews practice Judaism wherever they live. There are Jewish communities in every South American country.
no
"The Cigar Store Indian" is a type of carved wooden figure in the shape of a Native American that was once placed outside tobacco shops in the United States. The practice of displaying these figures is not an urban legend, but rather a historical fact that dates back to the 19th century.
Auguste Comte, a French philosopher and sociologist, first proposed applying the scientific method to the social world, a practice known as positivism. Comte believed that society could be studied and understood through empirical observation and data collection.
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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?
talk frankly and prepare for the possibility of casualties, practice casualty care and evacuation routinely and conduct memorial services
No. "Practise" is the British spelling of the verb "to practise". In North America the same verb is used with exactly the same meaning but with a slightly different spelling :"to practice". The noun "practice" on the other hand is spelled in both British and American English identically.
Most Latin American countries have a large population of Christians, with Roman Catholicism being the predominant religion. However, there are also growing populations of Protestant Christians and individuals with indigenous or Afro-Caribbean spiritual beliefs in some regions.