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Jimmy's outside Acton, having dropped off on train
Answer for the clue "Jimmy's outside Acton, having dropped off on train ", 8 letters:
practise
Alternative clues for the word practise
Word definitions for practise in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
chiefly British English spelling of practice .
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context transitive British Canada Australia New Zealand Ireland English) To repeat as a way of improving one's skill in that activity. 2 (context intransitive British Canada Australia New Zealand Ireland English) To repeat an activity in this way. ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Practise \Prac"tise\, v. t. & i. See Practice . Note: The analogy of the English language requires that the noun and verb which are pronounced alike should agree in spelling. Thus we have notice (n. & v.), noticed, noticing, noticer; poultice (n. & v.); ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES exercise/practise self-restraint ▪ The UN appealed for both sides to exercise self-restraint. practise a craft British English , practice a craft American English ▪ The craftsmen use traditional tools to practise their ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
v. engage in a rehearsal (of) [syn: rehearse , practice ] carry out or practice; as of jobs and professions; "practice law" [syn: practice , exercise , do ] learn by repetition; "We drilled French verbs every day"; "Pianists practice scales" [syn: drill ...
Usage examples of practise.
In this persuasion certain of the Aztec priests practised complete abscission or entire discerption of the virile parts, and a mutilation of females was not unknown similar to that immemorially a custom in Egypt.
Dissections of cadavers were restricted or outlawed, so those who practised medicine were prevented from acquiring first-hand knowledge of the human body.
He amused me with the enumeration of all her adorable qualities, and of all the cruelties she was practising upon him, for, although she received him at all hours, she repulsed him harshly whenever he tried to steal the slightest favour.
The Archdeacon, practised on his feet in many fencing bouts, flew out of the door and down the drive, and Gregory and the Colonel both lost breath--the first yelling for Ludding, the second shouting after the priest.
Carisophus, the disappointed courtier, who endeavours to creep back to favour by double-dealing with Aristippus and by practising the base treachery of a common informer, and who finally is kicked out of court and off the stage by Eubulus, the good counsellor.
I was somehow a thought uneasy thereat, not knowing what the bailie, now that he was out of the guildry, might be saying anent the use and wont that had been practised therein, and never more than in his own time.
What utter folly for any public man whose position is not inherited and cannot be bequeathed to his posterity, to support the edifice of his grandeur on any other basis than the noblest virtue practised for the general good, and to suppose that he can ensure the continuance of his own fortune otherwise than by taking all precautions against sudden whirlwinds which are want to arise in the midst of a calm, and to blow up the storm-clouds I mean the host of enemies.
In a flutelike voice, he sang of the sacred writings, or Vedas, composed well before the first millennium bc, and of the catalogue of magical yajnas, sacrificial formulas, mantras, and rituals that the Vedic religion embodied, and of the many schools, sects, and religions that had developed through the centuries: Sankhya, Yoga, Vedanta, Vaishnavas, Shaivas, Shak-tas, all of which were preached and practised under the separate canopies of Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, which in turn took their impetus from the original Vedic, changing and refining the basic precepts into a multiplicity of separate doctrines : Karma, avatar, samsara, dharma, trimurti, bhakti, maya.
The big blobby thing practising golf swings with the Jabberwock is a Krell, and that rhino over there is Rataxis.
It was at this crisis in their history that they began to be known as buccaneers, or people who practise the boucan, the native way of curing meat.
When he had first joined the ship, Bowen, who had once been one of the finest surgeons in London, was a besotted wreck, unfit to practise medicine and unable to open his eyes in the morning without a stiff drink.
But bugling meant nothing to them, except as a means to escape straight duty and to get more time to practise on guitars.
An exciting way of hunting this animal is practised by the Bunjaras, or gipsies of Central India.
To reason is like playing the cithara for the sake of achieving the art, like practising with a view to mastery, like any learning that aims at knowing.
William Codd, and when Bishop John Russell held a visitation in 1485 he was accused of practising unlawful arts.