The correct phrase in French is "tous les week-ends," which means every weekend. "Tout le week-end" means the entire weekend.
Ah! the French hate it, but the world is "le weekend", they imported the concept from English.Edit :The end of the week is not necessarily the weekend. If you are speaking of working days (i.e. if you have an assignment on Thursday or Friday), you would say "la fin de (la) semaine".Ex: Tu as eu rendez-vous ? -Oui, ce sera en fin de semaine. Did you get an appointment? - Yes, that will be at the end of the week.If you mean "weekend" in the English sense of the word, then the English word has been borrowed into French, with a slightly different spelling: "week-end", (hyphenated - masculine word).So far, I've never heard of one of my fellow Frenchmen hating the word. We have no qualms about using English words when we don't have a simpler one.
Yes it will, and it will be longer than the following weekend too, by one second. See link.
If there is more than one word per week: Words of the week. If there is only one word per week: Word of the week.
In some countries, it actually is a weekend. Friday and Saturday are the weekends in some countries, where Sunday is the first day of the week instead of Monday. Such as Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates. Some countries only have a one-day weekend and choose Friday as their one-day weekend, which makes Saturday the first day of their week. This is true in Kuwait and Iran.
According to Dictionary.com:week⋅end-noun 1. the end of a week, esp. the period of time between Friday evening and Monday morning: We spent the weekend at Virginia Beach. 2. this period as extended by one or more holidays, days off, or the like, that immediately precede or follow: We're getting a three-day weekend at Christmas. 3. any two-day period taken or given regularly as a weekly rest period from one's work: I have to work at the hospital on Saturdays and Sundays, so I take my weekends on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. -adjective 4. of, for, or on a weekend: a weekend pass; a weekend excursion. -verb (used without object) 5. to pass the weekend, as at a place: They weekended at their country place.
Spring Break is typically a one week vacation. Colleges across the country have off at different times. The Spring Break season starts at the end of February and goes until mid April, with the most schools off in the middle of March.
Grandchild is one word. Used in an example sentence - "our grandchild will be visiting in the weekend".
Week has one syllable.
Almost everywhere in the world, there are five weekdays in a week. However, some places use a system of four weekdays and three weekend days.In case it's not yet clear, a weekday is any one day of the week that is not a weekend day -- a school day in your country.5days
The word holiday is a countable noun, for example 'At the end of the year there are two holidays, one a week following the other.'
One Week to Save Your Marriage ended on 2007-06-27.