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The phrase "a decent few weeks" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a period of time that is satisfactory or acceptable, typically in a casual or informal context.
Example: "After a decent few weeks of hard work, we finally completed the project ahead of schedule."
Alternatives: "a good couple of weeks" or "a fair few weeks".
Exact(3)
It has been a decent few weeks for Scott Brown.
It's been a decent few weeks for Luiz Adriano, all in all.
Microsoft has had a decent few weeks.
Similar(57)
You could even make a case that the period of the byelection campaign coincided with what should have been an unusually decent few weeks for Labour.
He said: "I am really happy where my game is at, coming off a nice win at Wentworth a few weeks ago and a decent performance at Memorial".
What a difference a few weeks makes.
Simultaneously, though, the former right-back guided The Iron, in 13th when he was named as Mark Robins's replacement, to seven wins and a draw, leaving them with a decent shout of what had, a few weeks earlier, seemed an unlikely play-off place, going into the final game.
You might find some in the supermarkets for a few weeks, though a decent farm shop is a better bet or, best of all, a pick-your-own farm.
(Doug Morris has had a fairly decent career too. A few weeks ago he left his long-time post as Universal Music Group chairman to join Sony Music as its CEO).
"A report is a few weeks out".
"A few weeks ago we had a decent spell where we went six unbeaten and we thought we might be able to carry that on.
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