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The phrase "a week to warm" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to express a time frame for warming something, but it lacks clarity and context.
Example: "It will take a week to warm the house adequately before the guests arrive."
Alternatives: "a week to heat up" or "a week to get warm".
Exact(1)
I need a week to warm up".
Similar(59)
But this is not a movie-of-the-week to warm the heart.
But by the time procrastinators' shopping season comes around, they'll have had three weeks to warm up.
Even a small pool will take about a week to be noticeably warmer.
We depend on those Jets and Giants fans to come here on Sunday to warm us up once a week".
Do this two or three times a week, after warming up with at least twenty minutes of base training.
We suggest that you wash the hair at least once to twice a week with warm or cold water.
It would receive imported gas, supercooled to a liquid state, from three or four tankers a week, warm it back to a gaseous state and feed it at a rate of about a billion cubic feet a day into an existing cross-sound gas pipeline owned by the Iroquois Gas Transmission System.
Hodgson intends to take his squad to Portugal for a week of warm-weather training from 19-23 May. 19-23 May
Sunderland are one such team, but arrive in London fresh from a week's warm weather training and having taken four points from games against Liverpool and Manchester United.
After more than a week of warm days and extremely dry air that helped keep the fires raging, a cooler weather pattern blanketing the wine country's valley floor with fog has begun to settle in.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com