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1 practice **** prac·tice
['præktɪs]1. n1) (habit) abitudine f, consuetudine fpiano practice — esercizi mpl al piano
to be out of practice — esser fuori esercizio (or allenamento)
3) (not theory) pratica4)(of doctor, lawyer)
to be in practice — esercitare la professionehe has a small practice — (doctor) ha un numero ristretto di pazienti, (lawyer) ha un numero ristretto di clienti
2. vt, vi AmSee: -
2 ♦ practice
♦ practice /ˈpræktɪs/n.1 [u] pratica: Theory is useless without practice, la teoria è inutile senza la pratica; in practice, in pratica; to put into practice, mettere in pratica2 [uc] pratica; abitudine; consuetudine; uso; procedura; prassi: the practice of getting up early, l'abitudine d'alzarsi presto; common practice, uso corrente; good practice, buona prassi; the usual practice, la procedura corrente; Roman Catholic practices, pratiche religiose cattoliche; riti cattolici; to make a practice of doing st., prendere l'abitudine di fare qc.; sharp practice, comportamento disonesto; intrallazzi3 [u] esercizio; esercitazione; allenamento: ( sport) ball practice, allenamento col pallone; (mil.) gun practice, esercitazione ai pezzi; piano practice, esercizi al piano; You need more practice, hai bisogno di più esercizio; to keep in practice, tenersi in esercizio; to be out of practice, essere fuori esercizio5 [u] ( di dottore, avvocato) esercizio della professione; pratica: the practice of law, l'esercizio della professione forense; We are in practice together, siamo soci; Dr Jones has retired from practice, il dottor Jones non esercita più6 ( di dottore) gabinetto, studio, ambulatorio; ( di avvocato) studio; ( per estens.) clientela: a dental practice, un gabinetto dentistico; a legal practice, uno studio legale; Dr Brown has a large practice, il dottor Brown ha una vasta clientela; Where is his practice?, dove esercita?; dov'è il suo studio (ambulatorio, ecc.)?7 [u] (leg.) procedura8 (mat.) metodo delle quote● ( golf) practice green, campo per fare pratica □ (prov.) Practice makes perfect, è tutta questione di esercizio.NOTA D'USO: - practice o practise?- (to) practice /ˈpræktɪs/ -
3 practice
= practise* * *['præktis]1) (the actual doing of something, as opposed to the theory or idea: In theory the plan should work, but in practice there are a lot of difficulties.) pratica2) (the usual way(s) of doing things; (a) habit or custom: It was his usual practice to rise at 6.00 a.m.) abitudine3) (the repeated performance or exercise of something in order to learn to do it well: She has musical talent, but she needs a lot of practice; Have a quick practice before you start.) pratica, esercizio4) (a doctor's or lawyer's business: He has a practice in Southampton.) studio•- make a practice of
- put into practice* * *= practise -
4 translate
[trænz'leɪt] 1.verbo transitivo tradurre ( from da; into a); fig. interpretare [gesture, remark]; tradurre [idea, principle]2.verbo intransitivo [ person] tradurre, fare traduzioni; [word, phrase, text] tradursi* * *[træns'leit](to put (something said or written) into another language: He translated the book from French into English.) tradurre- translator* * *[trænz'leɪt] 1.verbo transitivo tradurre ( from da; into a); fig. interpretare [gesture, remark]; tradurre [idea, principle]2.verbo intransitivo [ person] tradurre, fare traduzioni; [word, phrase, text] tradursi
См. также в других словарях:
from theory into practice — put something which is just an idea into actual practice … English contemporary dictionary
put into practice — verb To take a theory and make it a practical reality. But there remain two problems to resolve before the plan can be put into practice … Wiktionary
practice — [prak′tis] vt. practiced, practicing [ME practisen < MFr practiser, altered < practiquer < ML practicare < LL practicus < Gr praktikos, concerning action, practical < prassein, to do] 1. to do or engage in frequently or usually; … English World dictionary
practice — I UK [ˈpræktɪs] / US noun Word forms practice : singular practice plural practices *** Get it right: practice: Don t confuse practice (a noun) with practise (a verb). These two words sound exactly the same: Wrong: Soldiers had only a few days in… … English dictionary
theory — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ complete, unified ▪ a grand unified theory of the physical forces governing matter ▪ general ▪ coherent ▪ current … Collocations dictionary
put — I adv. (colloq.) remaining in one place to stay put II v. 1) (B) ( to pose ) to put a question to smb. 2) (d; tr.) ( to place ) to put before (to put a proposal before a committee) 3) (d; tr.) ( to place ) to put in; into (to put milk in/into the … Combinatory dictionary
practice, practise — I n. habit 1) to make a practice, practise of smt. 2) a common, usual; local; universal practice, practise 3) a practice, practise to + inf. (it was her practice, practise to drink a glass of wine every evening) exercise 4) to have practice,… … Combinatory dictionary
practice — [ præktɪs] group local medical nursing private practice professional practice unethical unfair universal practice unscrupulous practices usual i … Combinatory dictionary
practice — prac|tice1 [ præktıs ] noun *** 1. ) count or uncount occasions when you do something in order to become better at it, or the time you spend doing this: You will become a faster typist with practice. Waylans broke his wrist during practice and… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
theory — 01. Einstein s famous [theory] that E = mc2 has been shown to be true by modern physics. 02. I studied practical linguistics to become an ESL teacher, but some other people in my classes were studying [theoretical] linguistics in order to do… … Grammatical examples in English
Put — Put, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Put}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Putting}.] [AS. potian to thrust: cf. Dan. putte to put, to put into, Fries. putje; perh. akin to W. pwtio to butt, poke, thrust; cf. also Gael. put to push, thrust, and E. potter, v. i.] 1. To… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English