this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2023
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Practise is a verb, practice is a noun.
I like to remember it with the following sentence.
"The doctor had to practise his surgery skills before he could open his own private practice clinic"
Verb, S=surgery. Noun, C=clinic
It's funny that you offer correction. UK English makes this distinction, US English doesn't and uses practice for both. Internationally where many English speakers mix neither usage can really be said to be incorrect. Pedantry fail.
Eh, I'm not that invested as to feel I've failed. To fail you need to try. I just like fighting fire with fire when I see people correcting other's spelling online.
At the end of the day, as long as you're communicating your message effectively whatever you've written has done it's job. I'm dyslexic, people offering unnecessary spelling advice irks me, so if they make a "mistake" (at least, as far as prescriptive English goes) I'm going to annoy them the same way their comments annoys everyone else. If they're not annoyed by it, well who cares, nothing gained nothing lost.
Practise is correct UK spelling.
What does the UK know about English?