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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a week filled" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a week that is full of specific activities, events, or experiences.
Example: "I had a week filled with exciting adventures and new experiences while traveling."
Alternatives: "a week packed" or "a week full".
Exact(43)
It was a week filled with emotion.
The Warhol was the first test of a week filled with 1960s Warhols.
Cullen loved that trip, his father said, a week filled with roller coasters and family barbecues.
Upstream averages 56 pages a week, filled with staff-written dispatches from around the world.
Last Sunday in Chicago, he won his 300th game, setting off a week filled with calls and gifts from friends.
Join us for a week filled with world-class tennis and golf instruction, hiking, adventure, food and wine, wellness classes, mixers and more.
Similar(17)
We've hardly had to shop this year, when previously we had been spending £40 a week filling in the gaps.
Steve has been spending four hours a day, three days a week filling in application forms for jobs.
One of the five doctors in the group was spending three to five hours a week filling out forms.
Mark Price, marketing director of Waitrose, a British supermarket, says people used to shop once a week, filling the car up with frozen stuff.
They walked off the plane wearing battle fatigues and spent a week filling the air with enough bellicose smack talk to become the example for what is bad and wrong about college football.
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