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The phrase "wet weekend" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a weekend with a lot of rain or bad weather. Example: "We had planned to go camping, but it turned out to be a wet weekend instead."
Exact(54)
It was a mucky, wet weekend.
Sounds like a wet weekend in Brussels to us.
Both were referring to the usually wet weekend at Silverstone, in England.
It was a cold, wet weekend and just the excuse we needed for a PAR-TAY!
So I signed up and eagerly embraced Twitter over a wet weekend.
How would you entertain them on a wet weekend in winter?
Similar(6)
As a teenager, I sailed fairly frequently, spending wet weekends tacking up and down a grey and choppy Thames with my parents in our small Mirror dinghy.
And remember, says another grandee, Mr Clegg "didn't grow up with the party": not for him years of doorstep canvassing on wet weekends, or drudgery on a local council.
I've loved this breathable jacket while training on wet weekends in Snowdonia and the Lakes – but was happy it stayed at the bottom of my rucksack during the CCC.
Raisin writes powerfully about weather and landscape, the sublime aspect of the moors, but he also shows us Heartbeat country, the land of kitsch steam trains, tourist coaches and wet weekends in Whitby.
Those of us who lead our lobbying work engage in no personal political activity – not only does it save us the laborious canvassing on wet weekends that blights the lives of the party political hacks that I know, but it makes our voice more credible.
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