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1 practise
['præktis]1) (to do exercises to improve one's performance in a particular skill etc: She practises the piano every day; You must practise more if you want to enter the competition.) a se antrena, a exersa2) (to make (something) a habit: to practise self-control.) a face exerciţii de3) (to do or follow (a profession, usually medicine or law): He practises (law) in London.) a practica, a profesa•
См. также в других словарях:
profession — pro‧fes‧sion [prəˈfeʆn] noun [countable] JOBS 1. a job that needs advanced education and special training: • realtors, a profession with an established record of service to the public • People assume that money management is a well paid… … Financial and business terms
enter — en‧ter [ˈentə ǁ ər] verb [transitive] 1. if people or goods enter a country, they arrive there: • A lot of goods are fraudulently and illegally entering the US. 2. COMMERCE if a company enters a market, it starts selling goods or services in that … Financial and business terms
Enter — En ter, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Entered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Entering}.] [OE. entren, enteren, F. entrer, fr. L. intrare, fr. intro inward, contr. fr. intero (sc. loco), fr. inter in between, between. See {Inter }, {In}, and cf. {Interior}.] 1. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
enter — Neither Fowler nor Gowers, nor even Burchfield in 1998, included an entry on enter, which is surprising given its range of collocation and usage. It is both transitive (i.e. takes an object) and intransitive: you can enter a place or simply enter … Modern English usage
enter — ► VERB 1) come or go into. 2) (often enter into/on/upon) begin to be involved in or do. 3) join (an institution or profession). 4) register as a competitor or participant in. 5) (enter into) undertake to bind oneself by (an agreement) 6) … English terms dictionary
Profession — The term profession is applied to those persons who have specialized and technical skill or knowledge which they apply, for a fee, to certain tasks that ordinary and unqualified people cannot ordinarily undertake. The term derives from the Latin … Wikipedia
profession — pro|fes|sion W3S3 [prəˈfeʃən] n 1.) a job that needs a high level of education and training the legal/medical/teaching etc profession ▪ members of the teaching profession enter/go into/join a profession ▪ Some students enter other professions… … Dictionary of contemporary English
enter — en|ter W1S1 [ˈentə US ər] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(go into)¦ 2¦(start working)¦ 3¦(start an activity)¦ 4¦(computer)¦ 5¦(write information)¦ 6¦(competition/examination)¦ 7¦(period of time)¦ 8¦(start to exist)¦ 9 enter somebody s life … Dictionary of contemporary English
enter */*/*/ — UK [ˈentə(r)] / US [ˈentər] verb Word forms enter : present tense I/you/we/they enter he/she/it enters present participle entering past tense entered past participle entered Get it right: enter: Enter is usually a transitive verb, and it takes a… … English dictionary
profession — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ chosen ▪ noble (esp. AmE) ▪ We are members of an old and noble profession. ▪ caring (BrE), health care (esp. AmE), helping (AmE … Collocations dictionary
enter — en|ter [ entər ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to go or come into a place: Soldiers entered the houses, apparently searching for weapons. The man had entered through the back door. The bullet missed his kidney because it entered his… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English