मुख्य सामग्री पर जाएँ
Grammar By Edumynt

"Practice" vs "Practise": British English Rule for Exams

Practice vs practise — the British noun-verb distinction, why American English uses only one form, and what Indian exams expect.

Confusing Words , British vs American English 1 min read

  • Practice = noun (अभ्यास — एक चीज़). “Daily practice is essential.”
  • Practise = verb (अभ्यास करना — क्रिया). “I practise every day.”

American English दोनों के लिए “practice” इस्तेमाल करती है:

“I practice every day.” (AmE) = “I practise every day.” (BrE)


Indian English British conventions follow करती है:

  • Noun → practice
  • Verb → practise

Noun (-c)Verb (-s)
practicepractise
adviceadvise
licencelicense

गलत (BrE)सही (BrE)
I need more practise.I need more practice. (noun)
Daily practise is important.Daily practice is important. (noun)

  1. _____ makes perfect. (noun)
  2. I _____ yoga every morning. (verb)
  3. She needs more _____ in writing. (noun)

  1. Practice (noun)
  2. practise (verb)
  3. practice (noun)

  • British English: practice = noun, practise = verb.
  • American English: practice = दोनों।
  • भारतीय परीक्षाएँ: British convention follow करें।