The version with the apostrophe is possessive so a sentence might read, " The two week's work for the project is done for the month of April. The other, without the apostrophe is the plural of week and the sentence could be, "It took two weeks for the project to be completed."
Week is a singular noun, meaning one week. Weeks is the plural noun, meaning more than one week. Week is a singular possessive is week's with the apostrophe before the s. Ex. This week's storm battered the eastern coast. Weeks is a plural possessive is weeks' with the apostrophe after the s. Ex: The weeks' stressful events left me exhausted. HOWEVER, it would just be simpler to say how many weeks and exclude the use of an apostrophe. Example: The stressful events of the last 3 and one-half weeks left me exhausted. (no apostrophe)
The plural possessive is weeks'.
The possessive form for the plural noun weeks is weeks'.Example: I have accrued three weeks' vacation this year.
Surnames often originate from occupations, locations, personal characteristics, or ancestors' names. Without more specific information on the origin of the name "Weeks," it is difficult to provide a definitive meaning. It could be derived from the Old English word for "wick" or "dweller."
The children will go five days a week to school. They have a lot of holidays, like: Summer: 6 weeks; Fall: 1 week; Christmas: 2 or 3 weeks ( it depends how christams itself falls ); Carneval: up to a week; Eastern: 2 weeks; Pentecoast: 2 weeks. In all 273 days but this only includes fall, winter, spring, and summer breaks, which are between one and six weeks long.
2 weeks
2 weeks
3 weeks if refrigerated, 2 weeks if not. :D
The Olympics last for 14 days/2 weeks.
as long as a cresent can last which is about a 2 weeks
A fever blister will last about 2 weeks.
About 2 weeks.
No a hurricane cannot last for more the 2 or 3 weeks
They last 2 weeks
no this weeks 5/23/09 was not the last one there is 2 more until the series is over
2 weeks ago, i think
2 weeks