'Seven days' in Finnish is 'seitsemän päivää'.
seven days
Sette giorni is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "seven days." The plural number and masculine plural noun may be preceded by the masculine plural definite article i ("the"). The pronunciation will be "SET-tey DJOR-nee" in Italian.
Seven days 'til Sunday is a common phrase that means the chances of something being completed successfully are very low. The phrase plays on that fact that week days function in a continuous loop.
There are 7 days in a week, so it probably means a week.
"Holy Week" is an English equivalent of the Armenian phrase "Avak Shapat."Specifically, the adjective "avak" means "holy." The noun "shapat" means "week." The term refers to the seven days beginning with the Monday immediately following Palm Sunday and culminating in Easter.
"Avak Shapat" is an Armenian equivalent of the English phrase "Holy Week."Specifically, the adjective "avak" means "holy." The noun "shapat" means "week." The term refers to the seven days that begin on the Monday immediately after Palm Sunday and that culminate in the celebrations of Easter Sunday.
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'Week' or 'the week' may be English equivalents of 'la settimana'. The phrase is pronounced 'lah SEHT-tee-MAH-nah'. A week is made up of seven days, which is 'siete giorni' in Italian.
Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.Sunday is seven days after Sunday.
banni(e) sept jours means 'banned for seven days' in English.
Shirley Baldwin has written: 'Conversational French in 7 days' -- subject(s): French language, Conversation and phrase books, English 'Conversational Spanish in 7 days' -- subject(s): Spoken Spanish, Spanish language, Conversation and phrase books, English
Giorni rilassati is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "lazy days." The masculine plural noun and adjective/past participle also may be translated into English as "relaxed days." The pronunciation will be "DJOR-nee REE-las-SA-tee" in Italian.