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The phrase "actually in a week" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to clarify or emphasize the timeframe of one week in a conversation or written context.
Example: "I thought the project would take longer, but it will actually be completed in a week."
Alternatives: "in just a week" or "within a week".
Exact(1)
Operationally, he actually in a week gets two nights to sleep on his bed.
Similar(59)
Giants offensive tackle Kareem McKenzie said this game felt a "twinge" like a playoff game, which the Giants will actually be playing in a week.
It was that kind of week, actually; a week in which I kept saying that when it comes to the TSA, maybe we don't really know what we think we do.
There has been little cause for the latter in my time, which actually began with a week back south in the company of cheerful Bradford linesmen, repairing rural Essex's telephones after the Great Storm.
Actually, a week of concerts in which he led the orchestra's soloists in as many complete works as it took would have been both more festive and more musically satisfying.
He seemed to be actually enjoying himself, a rare occurrence in a week high on seriousness and low on inspiration.
Actually, they heard back from him in a week saying that he wanted to do it, just tell him the time and place and he'd show up.
"It was so exciting to take a dub dat tape of the first Jamiroquai song, 'Too Young To Die,' play the single 30 to 40 times in a week, and actually break a new artist.
"It was so exciting to take a dub dat tape of the first Jamiroquai song, 'Too Young To Die', play the single 30-40 tines in a week and actually break a new artist.
Babies (especially newborns) can go through a great deal of laundry in a week, and might actually need larger hampers than school-aged children.
We'll have a bit more on the app when Instagram actually launches in a few weeks.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com