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The phrase "a week long internship" is not correct in standard written English; it should be "a week-long internship." You can use it to describe an internship that lasts for a duration of one week.
Example: "I applied for a week-long internship at the local museum to gain experience in the field."
Alternatives: "a one-week internship" or "a seven-day internship."
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The all-time record appears to be a week-long internship at Vogue that went for $42,500 in 2010, but other numbers are also jaw-dropping.
After working at a hands-on science center for a few years in college, I was lucky enough to receive the opportunity to study paleontology with professionals in Arizona through a week-long internship: My chance to work with dinosaurs finally came true!
But his offer of a two-day-a-week unpaid internship was a business decision.
A week or two of work experience has turned into a series of long internships, where it is not clear whether the intern is getting out as much as they put in.
She's a week into an internship, and she's already asking for a week off.
For instance, City Life Church in Leduc, Alberta, offers up a $375/year and five hours of mandatory volunteering a week "internship".
Take one woman who won a month-long internship with a leading Sunday newspaper.
Jacqueline Kennedy, née Bouvier, won a year-long internship at Vogue (though in the end she did not take it up).
This was followed by a year-long internship as assistant to the general counsel at an investment bank in New York.
I did a year-long internship with a music magazine when I left college.
The job was a year-long internship at Japan's third largest paint manufacturer.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com