The US spelling is practiced (past tense of to practice).
The UK spelling is as asked, practised.
Yes. "Spell" is a verb. It is the action of spelling another word. It can also be a noun, such as a magical spell.
As you have - either as a noun or a verb.
The verb is "to believe" (to accept as true).
That is the correct spelling of "sneak."
That is the correct spelling of the verb form "petting".
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.
In an industrial context conjugation is seldom practised.
Yes. "Spell" is a verb. It is the action of spelling another word. It can also be a noun, such as a magical spell.
The verb of practical is practise.Other verbs are practises, practising and practised.Some example sentences are:"I will practise my handwriting today"."She practises the flute on the weekends"."I am practising for my choir"."I practised all weekend".
Those letters will spell the verb launder.
Those letters will spell the verb utilize.
Those letters spell the verb 'bathe'.
No, "practised" is not an adverb; it is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "practise" (or "practice" in American English). Adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, often ending in "-ly," such as "quickly" or "silently." In contrast, "practised" describes an action that has been completed or a state related to the action of practicing.
The correct spelling of the verb is "solve" (figure out).
As you have - either as a noun or a verb.
être (auxiliary and verb)
As a verb or noun?