“Practice amp” or “practise amp”? [closed]












2















I'm rather confused as to whether you say I have a practise amp or I have a practice amp when referring to an amplifier that you use to practise your guitar playing.



I understand that the verb form is -se, but I also wonder whether "practice amp" is correct as it's a compound noun.



Any help and clarification would be gratefully received.










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closed as off-topic by Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM Jun 11 '15 at 13:50


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you've done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.

















  • Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

    – user66974
    Jun 10 '15 at 11:40











  • AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:05













  • A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:44
















2















I'm rather confused as to whether you say I have a practise amp or I have a practice amp when referring to an amplifier that you use to practise your guitar playing.



I understand that the verb form is -se, but I also wonder whether "practice amp" is correct as it's a compound noun.



Any help and clarification would be gratefully received.










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM Jun 11 '15 at 13:50


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you've done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.

















  • Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

    – user66974
    Jun 10 '15 at 11:40











  • AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:05













  • A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:44














2












2








2


1






I'm rather confused as to whether you say I have a practise amp or I have a practice amp when referring to an amplifier that you use to practise your guitar playing.



I understand that the verb form is -se, but I also wonder whether "practice amp" is correct as it's a compound noun.



Any help and clarification would be gratefully received.










share|improve this question
















I'm rather confused as to whether you say I have a practise amp or I have a practice amp when referring to an amplifier that you use to practise your guitar playing.



I understand that the verb form is -se, but I also wonder whether "practice amp" is correct as it's a compound noun.



Any help and clarification would be gratefully received.







word-usage verbs






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 10 '15 at 12:25









Dog Lover

4,91653264




4,91653264










asked Jun 10 '15 at 11:27









ShiroShiro

455




455




closed as off-topic by Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM Jun 11 '15 at 13:50


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you've done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







closed as off-topic by Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM Jun 11 '15 at 13:50


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Please include the research you've done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Edwin Ashworth, Marv Mills, Chenmunka, Robusto, ScotM

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

    – user66974
    Jun 10 '15 at 11:40











  • AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:05













  • A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:44



















  • Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

    – user66974
    Jun 10 '15 at 11:40











  • AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:05













  • A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:44

















Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

– user66974
Jun 10 '15 at 11:40





Practice vs practise: macquariedictionary.com.au/news/view/editor/article/101

– user66974
Jun 10 '15 at 11:40













AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

– FumbleFingers
Jun 10 '15 at 12:05







AmE has shifted pretty decisively to "practice" for the verb form in recent decades, so it wouldn't be an issue for them anyway. If Brits were going to use a verb form it'd probably be practising amp, just as you might refer to a bathing towel (usually, a bath towel, but never a bathe towel). So it's the NOUN form you want.

– FumbleFingers
Jun 10 '15 at 12:05















A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

– Edwin Ashworth
Jun 10 '15 at 23:44





A quick look at the relevant Google Ngrams would seem to provide a pretty conclusive answer.

– Edwin Ashworth
Jun 10 '15 at 23:44










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















6














You have a noun and a verb, and what you need is an adjective.



Both nouns and verbs can be used to modify nouns, but in different ways.



With verbs we can use a present participle ("practising amp") or past participle ("practised amp", though "practised guitarist" would be a more realistic example) or a to-infinitive ("amp to practise").



With nouns we just use the noun attributively ("practice amp").



It's the last of these that matches what you are looking for here.



Consider that when the verb and noun for an activity are more strongly different, such as food and eat. You would have a "food shop" but not an "eat shop" and so on, though you might well also have an "eating place" etc.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:13











  • @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

    – Jon Hanna
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:20











  • But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:08





















3














Yes, it is correct. You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb. One does not "practise an amp", do they?



This sentence might be useful:




I am going to practise writing an essay by writing a practice essay.




Trivia: In US English, "practice" is used for both the verb and the noun, thus eliminating any confusion.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

    – Jon Hanna
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:00






  • 2





    @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

    – Dog Lover
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:03








  • 3





    Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

    – Jon Hanna
    Jun 10 '15 at 12:04











  • 'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Jun 10 '15 at 23:39





















1














Yes! Since it's a noun, it's correct here. It simply means that the amplifier is used for practice.






share|improve this answer































    1














    I'm an American guitar player. "Practice Amp" is a noun, totally cool. Someone was writing about "you don't practise an amp" or something? Not a guitar player. Downvotes a-comin'! (edit: darn, no rep...)



    To my knowledge, practice or practise is an American/UK (resp) spelling thing.



    If one should use practise, not practice when conjugating as a verb, as your question suggests, I think that is news the entire US population, we ONLY spell it practice.



    Now, go practice your amps!






    share|improve this answer
































      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      6














      You have a noun and a verb, and what you need is an adjective.



      Both nouns and verbs can be used to modify nouns, but in different ways.



      With verbs we can use a present participle ("practising amp") or past participle ("practised amp", though "practised guitarist" would be a more realistic example) or a to-infinitive ("amp to practise").



      With nouns we just use the noun attributively ("practice amp").



      It's the last of these that matches what you are looking for here.



      Consider that when the verb and noun for an activity are more strongly different, such as food and eat. You would have a "food shop" but not an "eat shop" and so on, though you might well also have an "eating place" etc.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 2





        Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

        – FumbleFingers
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:13











      • @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:20











      • But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:08


















      6














      You have a noun and a verb, and what you need is an adjective.



      Both nouns and verbs can be used to modify nouns, but in different ways.



      With verbs we can use a present participle ("practising amp") or past participle ("practised amp", though "practised guitarist" would be a more realistic example) or a to-infinitive ("amp to practise").



      With nouns we just use the noun attributively ("practice amp").



      It's the last of these that matches what you are looking for here.



      Consider that when the verb and noun for an activity are more strongly different, such as food and eat. You would have a "food shop" but not an "eat shop" and so on, though you might well also have an "eating place" etc.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 2





        Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

        – FumbleFingers
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:13











      • @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:20











      • But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:08
















      6












      6








      6







      You have a noun and a verb, and what you need is an adjective.



      Both nouns and verbs can be used to modify nouns, but in different ways.



      With verbs we can use a present participle ("practising amp") or past participle ("practised amp", though "practised guitarist" would be a more realistic example) or a to-infinitive ("amp to practise").



      With nouns we just use the noun attributively ("practice amp").



      It's the last of these that matches what you are looking for here.



      Consider that when the verb and noun for an activity are more strongly different, such as food and eat. You would have a "food shop" but not an "eat shop" and so on, though you might well also have an "eating place" etc.






      share|improve this answer













      You have a noun and a verb, and what you need is an adjective.



      Both nouns and verbs can be used to modify nouns, but in different ways.



      With verbs we can use a present participle ("practising amp") or past participle ("practised amp", though "practised guitarist" would be a more realistic example) or a to-infinitive ("amp to practise").



      With nouns we just use the noun attributively ("practice amp").



      It's the last of these that matches what you are looking for here.



      Consider that when the verb and noun for an activity are more strongly different, such as food and eat. You would have a "food shop" but not an "eat shop" and so on, though you might well also have an "eating place" etc.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jun 10 '15 at 11:58









      Jon HannaJon Hanna

      48.3k194177




      48.3k194177








      • 2





        Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

        – FumbleFingers
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:13











      • @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:20











      • But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:08
















      • 2





        Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

        – FumbleFingers
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:13











      • @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:20











      • But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:08










      2




      2





      Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

      – FumbleFingers
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:13





      Yes, but interestingly when you press the re'cord button on your cassette deck (if you still have such antediluvian technology! :) everyone knows that the stress falls on the second syllable. So that must be a "verb" modifier - as opposed to stress on the first syllable (as a 'record player, for example), where it's an "attributive noun" usage.

      – FumbleFingers
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:13













      @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:20





      @FumbleFingers probably influenced in no small part by the fact that they often had the word "record" written on or above the button. Likewise, "close" and "minimise/minimize" buttons on windowed UI and so on.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:20













      But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Jun 10 '15 at 23:08







      But what FF is saying is that [paraphrasing] 'With verbs we can use a present participle or past participle, or a to-infinitive postnominally' is not the whole story.

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Jun 10 '15 at 23:08















      3














      Yes, it is correct. You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb. One does not "practise an amp", do they?



      This sentence might be useful:




      I am going to practise writing an essay by writing a practice essay.




      Trivia: In US English, "practice" is used for both the verb and the noun, thus eliminating any confusion.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:00






      • 2





        @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

        – Dog Lover
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:03








      • 3





        Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:04











      • 'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:39


















      3














      Yes, it is correct. You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb. One does not "practise an amp", do they?



      This sentence might be useful:




      I am going to practise writing an essay by writing a practice essay.




      Trivia: In US English, "practice" is used for both the verb and the noun, thus eliminating any confusion.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:00






      • 2





        @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

        – Dog Lover
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:03








      • 3





        Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:04











      • 'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:39
















      3












      3








      3







      Yes, it is correct. You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb. One does not "practise an amp", do they?



      This sentence might be useful:




      I am going to practise writing an essay by writing a practice essay.




      Trivia: In US English, "practice" is used for both the verb and the noun, thus eliminating any confusion.






      share|improve this answer













      Yes, it is correct. You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb. One does not "practise an amp", do they?



      This sentence might be useful:




      I am going to practise writing an essay by writing a practice essay.




      Trivia: In US English, "practice" is used for both the verb and the noun, thus eliminating any confusion.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jun 10 '15 at 11:41









      Dog LoverDog Lover

      4,91653264




      4,91653264








      • 1





        One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:00






      • 2





        @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

        – Dog Lover
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:03








      • 3





        Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:04











      • 'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:39
















      • 1





        One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:00






      • 2





        @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

        – Dog Lover
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:03








      • 3





        Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

        – Jon Hanna
        Jun 10 '15 at 12:04











      • 'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

        – Edwin Ashworth
        Jun 10 '15 at 23:39










      1




      1





      One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:00





      One doesn't practice an amp, but one does [verb] a [noun] for many nouns and verbs, so that argument doesn't hold as a general rule.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:00




      2




      2





      @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

      – Dog Lover
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:03







      @JonHanna It was not meant to be a rule - I included it as a sort of thinking exercise to help the OP understand why, rather than just giving a plain old "yes".

      – Dog Lover
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:03






      3




      3





      Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:04





      Yes, I would hold that as a thinking exercise it is incorrect, though it happens to arrive at the correct result.

      – Jon Hanna
      Jun 10 '15 at 12:04













      'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Jun 10 '15 at 23:39







      'You would not say "practise amp", the reason being "practise" is a verb' is fallacious reasoning. You say 'stop button', 'record button' (as FF says), 'drag chain / net', 'drift net', 'pull chain', 'float glass', 'float chamber', 'tote bag', 'call taxi'. There are more closed V+N compounds (cutthroat, passport, scofflaw, breakfast, killjoy, turnkey, scarecrow, pickpocket, pushchair ...).

      – Edwin Ashworth
      Jun 10 '15 at 23:39













      1














      Yes! Since it's a noun, it's correct here. It simply means that the amplifier is used for practice.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        Yes! Since it's a noun, it's correct here. It simply means that the amplifier is used for practice.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          Yes! Since it's a noun, it's correct here. It simply means that the amplifier is used for practice.






          share|improve this answer













          Yes! Since it's a noun, it's correct here. It simply means that the amplifier is used for practice.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jun 10 '15 at 11:40









          SankaraneSankarane

          2,1821517




          2,1821517























              1














              I'm an American guitar player. "Practice Amp" is a noun, totally cool. Someone was writing about "you don't practise an amp" or something? Not a guitar player. Downvotes a-comin'! (edit: darn, no rep...)



              To my knowledge, practice or practise is an American/UK (resp) spelling thing.



              If one should use practise, not practice when conjugating as a verb, as your question suggests, I think that is news the entire US population, we ONLY spell it practice.



              Now, go practice your amps!






              share|improve this answer






























                1














                I'm an American guitar player. "Practice Amp" is a noun, totally cool. Someone was writing about "you don't practise an amp" or something? Not a guitar player. Downvotes a-comin'! (edit: darn, no rep...)



                To my knowledge, practice or practise is an American/UK (resp) spelling thing.



                If one should use practise, not practice when conjugating as a verb, as your question suggests, I think that is news the entire US population, we ONLY spell it practice.



                Now, go practice your amps!






                share|improve this answer




























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  I'm an American guitar player. "Practice Amp" is a noun, totally cool. Someone was writing about "you don't practise an amp" or something? Not a guitar player. Downvotes a-comin'! (edit: darn, no rep...)



                  To my knowledge, practice or practise is an American/UK (resp) spelling thing.



                  If one should use practise, not practice when conjugating as a verb, as your question suggests, I think that is news the entire US population, we ONLY spell it practice.



                  Now, go practice your amps!






                  share|improve this answer















                  I'm an American guitar player. "Practice Amp" is a noun, totally cool. Someone was writing about "you don't practise an amp" or something? Not a guitar player. Downvotes a-comin'! (edit: darn, no rep...)



                  To my knowledge, practice or practise is an American/UK (resp) spelling thing.



                  If one should use practise, not practice when conjugating as a verb, as your question suggests, I think that is news the entire US population, we ONLY spell it practice.



                  Now, go practice your amps!







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jun 10 '15 at 19:34

























                  answered Jun 10 '15 at 17:59









                  Wilbur WhateleyWilbur Whateley

                  119116




                  119116















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