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The phrase "a week of miserable" is not correct in English.
It should be "a week of misery" or "a miserable week." You can use it when describing a week that was filled with unhappiness or discomfort.
Example: "After experiencing a week of misery due to constant rain and work stress, I was relieved to finally have a sunny weekend."
Alternatives: "a week of unhappiness" or "a week of distress."
Exact(1)
An apt invocation, certainly, during a week of miserable news on Wall Street — so many ignoble successes and profane gains!
Similar(59)
Miserable about not being able to ski with my bum shoulder, I'd signed up for a week of riding.
Reshad Jones intercepted Andy Dalton's overthrown pass at midfield with 1 22 left, preserving a win that ended two weeks of miserable, last-minute finishes for Miami.
After weeks of miserable winter weather, the sun has made a surprisingly strong appearance.
Browbeat his players and put them through a miserable week of pure, humorless hell?
After a miserable week of punctures and crashes he must be wondering if it was worth it.
After a long haul of miserable days, weeks and sadly years, something shook me one day.
We are a nation of miserable optimists.
But Easington is not just a museum, nor a collection of miserable anecdotes and bad statistics.
A plague of miserable memories makes sleep uncomfortable many nights.
They remained a week at the cold, miserable site.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com