I like to appreciate your __________oral English with me.

  1. Have you been practicing the song? These two version sound good to me. Were you practicing the song? sounds odd.

Practicing law/to practice law is the goal of most law students. In the OP sentence I think that only the noun "practice" may be used. "You need a lot of practice/lots of practice". "Lots of.

Understanding the Context

If you are exchanging with a Canadian, and especially if this is a familiar dialogue, je me pratique (beaucoup), would be the most natural response. If you reply in conversation "je m'exerce", it.

the word exercise is very rarely used in this context in the UK. the word exercise was used a little when i was at school, many years ago- we had 'exercise books' in which we would write.

HOw do you say, I'm practicing my spanish? Che Bella, don't forget that the dictionary is a great resource and you can find lots of answers there without opening a thread in the forum. At the.

It's a phrase in the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" Mindful of John Wesley's strictures on the use of many words in buying and selling, Simon made a pile practising medicine, but.... Please help.

Key Insights

I have been practicing - an activity that continues in the general present time, not necessarily at the moment of speaking. You may be at the moment in Uruguay, for 3 days, and say 'I.

This is why I've been practicing daily. This is why my skills.

Hi. Someone asked me what my job is. If my job is related to law. Is it idiomatic to reply "I practice law"?