<span class="searchmatch">weekers</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">weeker</span>...
combination with a number) Someone who participates in something for a certain number of <span class="searchmatch">weeks</span>. Most holidaymakers are two-<span class="searchmatch">weekers</span>, but a few are three-<span class="searchmatch">weekers</span>....
<span class="searchmatch">weeks</span> boxing <span class="searchmatch">week</span> bull <span class="searchmatch">week</span> bush <span class="searchmatch">week</span> coasties <span class="searchmatch">week</span> dead <span class="searchmatch">week</span> Ember <span class="searchmatch">week</span> fashion <span class="searchmatch">week</span> five-day <span class="searchmatch">week</span> freshers' <span class="searchmatch">week</span> frosh <span class="searchmatch">week</span> Golden <span class="searchmatch">Week</span> hell <span class="searchmatch">week</span> Holy...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Weeks</span> IPA(key): /wiːks/ Rhymes: -iːks <span class="searchmatch">weeks</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">week</span> Eskew...
Friday), and Holy Saturday. Eastertide Easter <span class="searchmatch">Week</span> (the <span class="searchmatch">week</span> following on from Easter Sunday) <span class="searchmatch">week</span> preceding Easter Holy <span class="searchmatch">Week</span> on Wikipedia.Wikipedia...
last <span class="searchmatch">week</span> (not comparable) (This entry is a translation hub.) <span class="searchmatch">week</span> before this one (archaic) yesterweek this <span class="searchmatch">week</span> next <span class="searchmatch">week</span> West Lake, Westlake, wakelets...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">weeks</span> English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Weeks</span> (disambiguation) Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">Weeks</span> (countable and uncountable, plural Weekses) A surname. An...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Weekes</span> <span class="searchmatch">weekes</span> plural of weeke skweee...
from Old Saxon wika, from Proto-Germanic *wikǭ. More at <span class="searchmatch">week</span>. <span class="searchmatch">Week</span> f (plural Weken or <span class="searchmatch">Week</span>) <span class="searchmatch">week</span> waag (Mooring) weg (Föhr-Amrum) From Old Frisian wike,...
this <span class="searchmatch">week</span> (not comparable) (This entry is a translation hub.) (On) Sunday this <span class="searchmatch">week</span>. in the current <span class="searchmatch">week</span> (archaic) yesterweek last <span class="searchmatch">week</span> next <span class="searchmatch">week</span>...