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".
The verb of practice is practise.
Other verbs are practises, practising and practised.
Some example sentences are:
"I practise the piano".
"He practises for the exam".
"I am practising my verbs".
"He practised the dance routing this morning".
Practice is a noun as well as Verb in US English.
In UK English Practice is a noun. The verb form is Practise.
adverb
'use' as a verb - apply, employ, exercise, exploit, harness, operate, utilize
Play has several meanings both as noun and a verb. It can mean:A priod of spontaneous activity (noun)An accumulation of oil or gas (noun)To participate in spontaneous amusement (verb)A drama presented as a theatrical production (noun)To act as a character in a drama (verb)To produce music from an instrument (verb)To cheat or swindle (verb)To participate in a game of cards or similar (verb)To land a fish after the initial hooking of the fish (verb)To pass or continue to a conclusion usually with "out" (verb)To tire usually in past tense with out (verb)
To change a noun into a verb you add -ing. So when you see a word ending in -ing you know that it is the activity described by the word that is being used as a subject or an object. I swim {is the verb form} I like Swimming {like is the verb}{swimming is a noun describing the activity that happens when one swims} I am a man {am is the 1st person verb form of be} I am being a man {am is the verb} {being describes the activity under-way} The verb 'be' is used in this form is either in its imperative or infinative state: imperative means a command Be reasonable, be practical, be with me. infinitive is when it is used with the word 'to' To be or not to be. It is also another way of turning a verb into a noun.
more practical, most practical
more practical, most practical
more practical
The prefix of "not practical" is "un-".
To change a noun into a verb you add -ing. So when you see a word ending in -ing you know that it is the activity described by the word that is being used as a subject or an object. I swim {is the verb form} I like Swimming {like is the verb}{swimming is a noun describing the activity that happens when one swims} I am a man {am is the 1st person verb form of be} I am being a man {am is the verb} {being describes the activity under-way} The verb 'be' is used in this form is either in its imperative or infinative state: imperative means a command Be reasonable, be practical, be with me. infinitive is when it is used with the word 'to' To be or not to be. It is also another way of turning a verb into a noun.
Practical is the synonym of realistic. When practical term is used, it simply means that the statement is not hypothetical. It can be done because it is practical.
more practical, most practical
Soon is practical as soon as you think soon is practical