- each week
- adverbwithout missing a week (Freq. 4)-
she visited her aunt weekly
• Syn: ↑hebdomadally, ↑weekly, ↑every week• Derived from adjective: ↑hebdomadal (for: ↑hebdomadally)
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
she visited her aunt weekly
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
week|ly — «WEEK lee», adjective, adverb, noun, plural lies. –adj. 1. of a week; for a week; lasting a week. 2. done, happening, or appearing once a week or each week: »She writes a weekly letter to her grandmother. 3. of or having to do with the working… … Useful english dictionary
each — W1S1 [i:tʃ] determiner, pron, adv [: Old English; Origin: Alc] 1.) every one of two or more things or people, considered separately →↑every ▪ She had a bottle in each hand. ▪ Grill the fish for five minutes on each side. ▪ Each member of the team … Dictionary of contemporary English
week — [wēk] n. [ME weke < OE wicu with lengthened & lowered vowel, akin to Ger woche (OHG wohha) < IE * weig , to bend (see WEAK): basic sense “period of change”] 1. a period of seven days, esp. one beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday… … English World dictionary
week's pay — The amount of pay that an employee is due each week for the purposes of many individual statutory rights, as defined in sections 221 229 of the ERA 1996. For some of these individual statutory rights, a week s pay is subject to a statutory limit… … Law dictionary
Week — For more details on each day of the week, see Weekday names. For the TV station in the Peoria Bloomington, Illinois market, see WEEK TV. Weeks redirects here. For other uses, see Weeks (disambiguation). A week is a time unit equal to seven days.… … Wikipedia
week in week out — every week, each week … English contemporary dictionary
week — /week/, n. 1. a period of seven successive days, usually understood as beginning with Sunday and ending with Saturday. 2. a period of seven successive days that begins with or includes an indicated day: the week of June 3; Christmas week. 3.… … Universalium
Week Ending — Week Ending... was a satirical radio current affairs sketch show, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4, usually on Friday evenings. It was devised by writer/producers Simon Brett and David Hatch, and was originally hosted by Nationwide presenter… … Wikipedia
week — O.E. wice, from P.Gmc. *wikon (Cf. O.N. vika, O.Fris. wike, M.Du. weke, O.H.G. wecha, Ger. woche), probably originally with the sense of a turning or succession (Cf. Goth. wikon in the course of, O.N. vika sea mile, originally change of oar … Etymology dictionary
Week at a Glance — was a section of the BBC News online website. It was updated each morning, so that it contained links to the archived articles for about five of the top stories from each of the preceding seven days, except that Saturday and Sunday were combined… … Wikipedia