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?
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.
a lot of practice i play at least 6 days a week and i play professional 5 a side (U19) its not only practise you need it is mentality and talent
practiceActually,Practice is a noun. Practise is a verb.Ie.You must go to the medical practice.You must practise.
we practise it by helping our friends when they need our help
Practice:An activity or exercise that is done regularly.
If you were to say, "I need to go to my assembly ______." You would use Practice. You use practise when you are using "practice" as a verb. e.g. "I really need to practise my mathematics." (The act of doing something.) A noun is used like this... "Wow! I just missed piano practice." (An actual thing that you missed.)
I practise = practico (from 'practicar' to practise)
practise
Well it takes a lot of practice , practice makes perfect so just try to learn the piece well and practise
Practice.... practice practise practise... :) good luck with the exam... love the mysterious Guru! xoxo