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The phrase "a pretty good week" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a week that was generally positive or satisfactory, often in a casual or informal context.
Example: "After a long time of stress and uncertainty, I finally had a pretty good week at work."
Alternatives: "a fairly decent week" or "a rather nice week".
Exact(46)
"It's been a pretty good week".
So it's a pretty good week".
For Princetonians in Washington, it was a pretty good week.
"This week we had a pretty good week at practice.
In fact, it's a pretty good week in East Liberty.
It's been a pretty good week for fans of excellent communication.
Similar(14)
"All in all, pretty good week being tired, coming back for the first time after winning the Masters, all this different media attention," Watson said.
"Pretty good week," Robin Ventura said.
True, we'd probably all have a pretty good first week on Twitter if we had an employee of Twitter standing by specifically to help us get things right.
Lou Dobbs, the financial news anchor who left CNN two years ago but returned to a hero's welcome last Monday, had a pretty good first week back behind his old desk -- though it was not without its speed bumps.
I found it curious that the Trump campaign — which has had a pretty good three weeks, as Hillary Clinton's numbers have come down and his numbers have gone up in certain significant battleground states and even nationally — would waste an entire news cycle to bring up birtherism again.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com