A fortnight is a period of two weeks, typically used in British English. It is a convenient way to describe a span of time that equals 14 days.
Starships were meant to fly
It seems there may be a typo in your question. If you meant "philological," it refers to the study of languages and the historical development of words and languages. If you meant something else, please provide more context.
If you meant planet then Jupiter with its moon Ganymede.
a weak country under the influence of a strong country
Using retrograde pricing helps to determine if exporting a product will be profitable or not.
There are zero weeks in a forthnight because forthnight is not a real word! There are 2 weeks in a FORTNIGHT.
Two weeks.
A fortnight is 14 days or 2 weeks in length.
Nope! It appears to be a misspelling of "Fortnight."
It is a period of time lasting 2 weeks in duration.
Meant... As in "he was meant to have it."
It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!It depends on WHAT it is meant to be!
There is no homophone for meant
The term "fortnight" comes from the Old English phrase "fēowertyne niht," which means "fourteen nights." It refers to a period of two weeks, or 14 days. The word is commonly used in British English to indicate a time frame in various contexts, such as payments or scheduling. The prefix "fort-" signifies "four," while "night" refers to the duration of the time span.
what is meant by demand ?
what is meant by topology?
what is meant by electronics?