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The phrase "a years of work" is not correct in English.
It should be "a year of work" or "years of work" depending on the intended meaning. You can use "a year of work" when referring to the effort or time spent on a task or project that spans one year.
Example: "Completing this project required a year of work, but the results were worth it."
Alternatives: "one year of effort" or "a year's worth of work."
Exact(1)
On the basis of their exposure records, the following environmental indices of Hg occupational exposure were calculated for each miner: a) years of work in the mercury mine (years of exposure); b) cycles of exposure (intervals of work exposed to Hg); and c) average time-weighted (ATW) air Hg concentration expressed in milligrams Hg per cubic meter of air (Kobal and Dizdarevič 1997).
Similar(59)
The company is the product of a year of work by two Harvard graduates, Dylan Norton and Josh Harlon.
Converting Stormwind into a flyover city was about a year of work.
D.D.: Did it change on the set at all? S.D.: No. D.H.: The architecture was a year of work.
It is less a year in Beshty's life, he said, and more "a year of work".
After more than a year of work on health care, we made our recommendations public in June.
He missed a year of work and had to make ends meet with a weekly compensation check of $265.
The proposal is the culmination of more than a year of work by the chairman, Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana.
They must be United States citizens and have a high school diploma or a year of work experience.
After almost a year of work, the group called for simplifying the tax code with lower rates and fewer loopholes.
Mr. Cherman estimates that it will take $6.5 million and at least a year of work to restore his hotel.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com