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Discover LudwigThe phrase "at last week" is not a complete sentence and does not make sense on its own.
It could be used as part of a longer sentence, but it would need more context to be grammatically correct and meaningful. Here are some examples of how it could be used: - My boss gave me an assignment at last week's team meeting. - I had been waiting for a response from the company for weeks, and at last week's meeting they finally gave me an update. - I left my keys at last week's party and had to go back to retrieve them.
Exact(34)
This doesn't conflict with Spinoza's denial of free will, which we looked at last week.
"You look at last week, that was the approach we took.
"This is a witness who has been beaten up once and shot at last week," Ms. Borko said.
The album and its artwork was hinted at last week when mysterious posters decorated with the Flower of Life popped up on the London Underground.
The above however is not a hallucination of what might have been, it describes a debate I spoke at last week at the Cambridge Union Society.
Monday brought the news, hinted at last week, that "Twin Peaks," the phenomenon turned flop turned cult classic show from twenty-five yeago ago, would be returning, in 2016, for a nine-episode limited engagement on Showtime.
Similar(26)
How I wish that David Brion Davis's article, "Free at Last" (Week in Review, Aug. 26), about the legacy of the South's ideological victory after the Civil War, had appeared on the breakfast table while I was growing up in the American South.
At Christmas.
"At Thanksgiving and Christmas.
It arrived at 12.22pm.
Cult viewing at last.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com