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practice
[ prak-tis ]
noun
- habitual or customary performance; operation:
office practice.
- habit; custom:
It is not the practice here for men to wear long hair.
- repeated performance or systematic exercise for the purpose of acquiring skill or proficiency:
Practice makes perfect.
Synonyms: application
- condition arrived at by experience or exercise:
She refused to play the piano, because she was out of practice.
- the action or process of performing or doing something:
to put a scheme into practice;
the shameful practices of a blackmailer.
- the exercise or pursuit of a profession or occupation, especially law or medicine:
She plans to set up practice in her hometown.
- the business of a professional person:
The doctor wanted his daughter to take over his practice when he retired.
- Law. the established method of conducting legal proceedings.
- Archaic. plotting; intrigue; trickery.
- Usually practices. Archaic. intrigues; plots.
verb (used with object)
- to perform or do habitually or usually:
to practice a strict regimen.
- to follow or observe habitually or customarily:
to practice one's religion.
- to exercise or pursue as a profession, art, or occupation:
to practice law.
- to perform or do repeatedly in order to acquire skill or proficiency:
to practice the violin.
- to train or drill (a person, animal, etc.) in something in order to give proficiency.
verb (used without object)
- to do something habitually or as a practice.
- to pursue a profession, especially law or medicine.
- to exercise oneself by repeated performance in order to acquire skill:
to practice at shooting.
- Archaic. to plot or conspire.
practice
/ ˈpræktɪs /
noun
- a usual or customary action or proceeding
he made a practice of stealing stamps
it was his practice to rise at six
- repetition or exercise of an activity in order to achieve mastery and fluency
- the condition of having mastery of a skill or activity through repetition (esp in the phrases in practice, out of practice )
- the exercise of a profession
he set up practice as a lawyer
- the act of doing something
he put his plans into practice
- the established method of conducting proceedings in a court of law
verb
- the US spelling of practise
Other Words From
- practic·er noun
- mis·practice noun verb mispracticed mispracticing
- non·practice noun
- outpractice verb (used with object) outpracticed outpracticing
- over·practice verb (used with object) overpracticed overpracticing
- pre·practice verb prepracticed prepracticing
- re·practice verb (used with object) repracticed repracticing
Word History and Origins
Origin of practice1
Word History and Origins
Origin of practice1
Idioms and Phrases
- in practice
- make a practice of
- out of practice
- put into practice
- sharp practice
Example Sentences
He was asked if Lemon threw it that well in practice.
Yet in practice, Black veterans were excluded from the housing loan benefits that white veterans used to build generational wealth.
Her chutzpah coupled with her father's broad-mindedness helped her escape the practice for the rest of her life.
The suit claims that the district’s policies and practices “unfairly restrict” the girls’ “freedom of expression and deny them fair and equal access to athletic opportunities.”
Close challenged her team during practice all week, demanding high-pressure defense to help prepare for the physicality of Sunday’s game.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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