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The phrase "a week examining" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a duration of time spent on an activity, specifically the act of examining something over the course of a week.
Example: "I spent a week examining the data to ensure its accuracy before presenting my findings."
Alternatives: "a week reviewing" or "a week analyzing".
Exact(6)
Teams typically spend a week examining a school's curriculum, facilities, teacher practice, support services and student work.
Federated pulled all French Connection merchandise at the end of September, then spent a week examining everything before deciding to restore those items labeled simply French Connection.
The change will see a rolling back of the in-depth approach to assessing the quality and safety of hospital services over the past three years, in which scores of CQC inspectors have spent up to a week examining how hospitals operate.
Twenty rising seniors and graduate students spent a week examining how technology can be designed to improve people's lives at last month's Summer School on Designing Technology for Social Impact, a new workshop aimed at encouraging minorities in STEM to consider careers in academia.
The following June, Mauchly and his son came to Ames and spent a week examining the computer.
In between, she'll spend a week examining how the small Nordic country of fewer than 6 million people has a student base that consistently scores in the top 10, if not the best, in the world on several educational standards.
Similar(54)
Continue Every night for a week, examine results, if you get good results continue until it is gone.
As part of a BBC State of Sport week examining different topics and issues across sport, meet Paris St-Germain's League of Legends team, who are representing the club in online tournaments.
I began the week examining the increasing and interesting struggle for power between the Tea Party Republicans and the entrenched-establishment Republicans, which is always both fascinating and amusing.
The reward to working an additional week examined in this paper has a lot in common with the reward to earning more per week, which Adam and Browne (2013) call the EMTR, except that the latter does not reflect foregone unemployment benefits or the value of the NICs' thresholds.
Unfortunately that also gives the program, which each week examines the cornerstones of cherished American fast food and the ingredients that go into them, a superficial feel.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com