That is the correct US spelling of "centering." (The UK spelling, or an architectural noun, may be centring.)
Australia officially uses British-English.The correct spelling in British-English (and therefore in Australia) is centre.In American-English, the correct spelling is center. American-English is considered incorrect in British-English countries.
That is the correct spelling of "keep" (retain, hold, or a castle's center).
The correct spelling is "bullseye" (also bull's eye), the center of a target.
The correct spelling of the geometric term is radius(distance from the center)
center
The correct spelling is CENTER, not senter, and the CENTER is where the stem is
That is the correct US spelling of "centering." (The UK spelling, or an architectural noun, may be centring.)
Australia officially uses British-English.The correct spelling in British-English (and therefore in Australia) is centre.In American-English, the correct spelling is center. American-English is considered incorrect in British-English countries.
That is the correct spelling of "keep" (retain, hold, or a castle's center).
The correct spelling is "bullseye" (also bull's eye), the center of a target.
The correct spelling of the geometric term is radius(distance from the center)
Yes. "Centre" is the British spelling of "center".
The US spelling is center but the spelling "centre" is frequently used for proper nouns such as buildings and towns.The UK spelling is centre.
Personally, I'm more inclined towards "training centre", being native to a Commonwealth country. However, it's well known that American spelling tends to be much different than English spelling, and "training center" would be more appropriate for someone in the US.
Both are correct, but "situated in the center" is slightly more common.
That is the correct spelling of "food court" (dining area of a mall, center, or gallery).