Answer 1 - Spanish
if you want to talk about time and stuff it would be: Hace dos semanas... which translates to it has been two weeks.
For example:
Hace dos semanas que yo hablo con mis amigos.
Meaning:
I have been talking to my friends for two weeks.
If you want to say something happened two weeks ago you would say:
Hace dos semanas que yo hable con mis amigos.
(the e in hable has an accent.)
Answer 2 - French
As this question is also categorized in "English to French," below are a few answers:
"Il y a deux semaines que je suis à mon nouveau job" means "I have been working at my new job for two weeks." The French present tense is used because the action began in the past and continues into the present.
"On m'a licencié il y a deux semaines" means "I was laid off two weeks ago." The French past tense is used because the action began and ended in the past and does not continue into the present.
Dos semanas pasada.
*
Solo dos semanas más.
Nos vemos en dos semanas
Two weeks ago it was peobody park and the furniture store
104 weeks is two or three days shy of two years.
It's the period of time that began four weeks ago and ended two weeks ago.
To say two weeks in German you would say zwei Wochen.
two weeks ago
two weeks ago
Two weeks ago
yes, if you miscarried two weeks or more ago.
no she's not