If there is more than one word per week: Words of the week.
If there is only one word per week: Word of the week.
It can be one word and two words it just depends on how you are using it. As a noun it is one word. If "flow" acts as a verb (for example, "the work flows well"), use two words.
Yes, the term 'here of late' is correct English grammar, as in: 'He was here of late, but he'll be in London next week.', which could equally be expressed: 'He was here [recently, lately, latterly], but he'll be in London next week.'
Yes, it can. The term "Monday's dinner" is correct.
The term 'every week' is an adjective (every) describing a noun (week). The noun 'week' is a common noun.
My father didn't give my allowance for this week.
Yes, "weekly" is a compound word formed from the words "week" and "ly."
No. It is a noun but not a compound word. Because it is a day of the week it has nothing to do with the individual words.
The prefix for the word 'week' is 'bi-', as in words like 'biweekly' or 'bimonthly' which indicate an event occurring every two weeks or months.
Yes, the possessive form of the noun week is the correct form for 'the end of the week' (the week's end).
This week would be a blessing, is grammatically correct.
The correct spelling is holiday.An example sentence is: "we are going on holiday to Spain next week".
Interaction includes cheers and chants for the new words of the week, activities that expand the students.