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weekn.Origin: A word inherited from Germanic. Etymology: Cognate with Old Frisian wike (West Frisian wike , North Frisian week , wik ), Old Saxon -wika (in krūciwika Holy Week, lit. ‘cross-week’; Middle Low German weke , wekene ), Middle Dutch weke , weike , weuke , wouke (Dutch week ), Old High German wehha , wohha (Middle High German woche , wuche , German Woche ), Old Icelandic vika , Norwegian (Nynorsk) veke , vike , (Bokmål) uke , Old Swedish vika , (rare) uka (Swedish vecka ), Old Danish ukæ (Danish uge ), perhaps < the same Germanic base as Old English wīcan to give way, Old Icelandic víkja to turn (see wike n.), and perhaps further related to classical Latin vicis (genitive singular) change, turn (see vice n.6). Compare ( < a Germanic language) Finnish viikko, Sami vakko, and related forms, in sense ‘week’.For the cultural origins of the seven-day week see the discussion at sense 1a. It has been argued that the Germanic base underlying the attested words had an earlier sense referring to changes of duty, which was then applied to the sequence of deities governing the weekly cycle, and finally transferred to the week itself. Such an earlier sense may be reflected by Old Icelandic vika unit of distance travelled at sea (perhaps with reference to the periodical change of rowing teams, although this cannot be independently substantiated), Gothic wiko order in which something happens (in an isolated example in Luke 1:8 with reference to the allocation of religious duties, translating ancient Greek τάξις order, arrangement: see taxis n.), and also Old English wīce office, duty, function (see wike n.). (The usual word for ‘week’ in the Gothic bible is sabbato ( < ancient Greek σάββατον the Sabbath, period between two sabbaths: see sabbath n.).) The Germanic base may show semantic influence from (perhaps ultimately cognate) classical Latin vicis (genitive) turn, change; it has also been suggested that it was borrowed directly < this Latin word. With use with reference to other calendrical systems based on different numbers of days (sense 1b) compare e.g. French decade ten-day unit of the French Republican calendar (1793: see decade n.), classical Latin nundinum Roman eight-day cycle between two market days (counted inclusively; < nundinae : see nundine n.), and (with quot. 1935) Old Norwegian fimt summons with five days' notice ( < the base of fimm five adj. + a dental suffix), sometimes interpreted as reflecting an earlier five-day week. Form history. In Old English usually a weak feminine (inflected wican , wucan , etc.; compare the early nominative singular wiice ); in West Saxon the originally strong feminine form wucu (see β. forms) is normally used for the nominative singular. In West Saxon the stem vowel i frequently undergoes back mutation to u as a result of the influence of the initial w and the u of the inflectional ending. In Middle English comparable forms, apparently due to the influence of initial w , also appear in other regional varieties (see β. forms). Loss of initial w before following u is occasionally attested in late West Saxon (see γ. forms); quot. c1460 at sense 1aγ. , if it is not simply a scribal error, may perhaps show an isolated reflex of such forms. Comparable forms are independently attested in Older Scots. Influence from Scandinavian languages has been suggested for the latter. In Middle English the word shows open syllable lengthening of i to long close ē , apparently originally in disyllabic forms in northern dialects; such forms subsequently also appear in other varieties (see δ. forms; an apparent earlier south-western example shown by the variant reading in quot. c1275 at sense 2 is probably a scribal error). Some examples of wick (with short ĭ , see α. forms) may show a subsequent shortening of long close ē. Older Scots spellings in -l- (e.g. wolk, oulk, ulk, etc.) are reverse spellings reflecting earlier vocalization of l. 1. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] α. eOE (Parker) anno 878 Þa on þære seofoðan wiecan ofer Eastron he gerad to Ecgbryhtes stane. eOE tr. Bede (Tanner) v. ii. 388 Mid ðy hit ða an wiice ðæs fæstnes gefylled wæs. OE On Four Ember-Fasts (Laud) in H. Henel (1934) 61 On kalendis Iunii, on þære æfteran wican. a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris (1868) 1st Ser. 139 Þis halie dei..is sunnen dei icleoped...Alle oðer daȝes of þe wike beoð to þreldome to þis dei. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon (Calig.) (1963) l. 6950 Þene feorðe dæi i þere wike heo ȝifuen him [sc. Woden] to wurð-scipe. c1300 St. Michael (Laud) 438 in C. Horstmann (1887) 312 Þe seoue Dawes in þe wyke þare-aftur I-nemde beoth. a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer (Pierpont Morgan) (1881) ii. l. 430 I shal nomore com here þis wyke. 1455 J. Fastolf in (2004) II. 140 My lord of Norwich shal the next wyke visite the hous of Hykelyng. 1530 (Fawkes) (1873) i. 4 The seconde parte ys of your seuen storyes, accordynge to the seuen dayes of the wyeke. 1590 in P. H. Hore (1900) I. 271 James..went to St. James' faire to Bristowe the last wick. 1656 C. Longland Let. 14 Apr. in (1742) IV. 674 My letters from Rom this wieke tel me great newes from Ingland. 1999 N. L. Tawes 87 Oi hope He dassint git here 'til next wyke. β. OE Byrhtferð (Ashm.) (1995) ii. iii. 112 Seo wucu on Grecisc hatte ebdomada and on Lyden septimana. Seofon daga ryne ys seo wucu, and feower wucan wyrcað anne monð.lOE (Laud) anno 1118 On þison geare on þære wucon Theophanie wæs anes æfenes swyðe mycel lihtinge.lOE tr. Honorius Augustodunensis Elucidarium in R. D.-N. Warner (1917) 144 Hwy aras ure Drihten of deaðe þæs formeste dæȝes þære wuca?c1175 (Burchfield transcript) l. 4173 Itt iss aȝȝ heh messe daȝȝ. Att here wukess ende.a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris (1873) 2nd Ser. 3 Hit [sc. Advent] lasteð þre wuke fulle and sum del more.c1325 (c1300) (Calig.) 2431 Of þe wouke þen verþe day In oure tonge ycluped in hononour [read honour] of him is wodnes day.a1425 (Lansd.) (1902) 29 Al þe wukis in þe summir, sal ye faste ilke wuke tua dais.c1485 ( G. Hay (2005) 284 The peple desyris..the mare to se him, na he rade euery day, or euery wolk or moneth.1552 Abp. J. Hamilton i. viii. f. 22v Als well on the Satterday as ony other day of the wouke.γ. OE tr. Theodulf of Orleans (Bodl.) xxxvi. 377 On þære ærestan ucan [L. ebdomada] ær Lenctenes anginne andetnissa mæssepreostum syndon to syllanne.c1460 (c1385) G. Chaucer (Harl. 1239) (1940) l. 1539 Oke [c1405 Hengwrt Selde is the friday al the wike ylike]. 1508 (Chepman & Myllar) sig. diiiiv With reualing and reuay all the oulk hale.1565 in J. H. Burton (1877) 1st Ser. I. 332 That na sellaris be oppynnit bot thryis in the oulk for selling of thair geir.1566 in D. H. Fleming (1897) 495 Nocht onlie the twa Sondayis bot also the hole rest of the olk.1608 Rec. Innerwick in A. I. Ritchie (1880) 114 The examination to begin ye nixt olk..for that purpose.1614 in H. M. Paton (1957) I. 343 The uther oulk at the founding of the dykis to the maissounes.1728 A. Ramsay 31 Last ouk I dream'd my tup..brak his leg.1796 A. Steel Twa Cuckolds in A. Steel & R. Gall 6 Ye ken, ye heard me say, I this owk in his loof wad lay.1807 R. Tannahill ii. iii Wife—fetch my bonnet that I caft last owk.1868 G. MacDonald I. xi. 137 I'll think aboot it whan ance I'm throu wi' this job. That'll be neist ook or thereabouts, or aiblins two days efter.1909 25 Sept. 892/1 The minister has been catecheezin' in yere barn last ook.1993 J. J. Graham (rev. ed.) 61/1 Ook, week.δ. a1393 J. Gower (Fairf.) vii. l. 957 He..Of sevene daies made a weke.a1425 J. Wyclif (1871) II. 1 Þe Wednesdai in þe firste weke of Advent.?a1425 (Egerton) (1889) 61 On þe Seterday it rynnez fast, and all þe weke elles it standes still.1529 T. More Let. 3 Sept. in (1557) 1419/2 I shal (I think)..get leaue this next weke to come home and se you.1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane f. ccxxxj That thre daies in the weke they tame theyr body with fastynge.a1633 G. Herbert (1640) sig. C5v Thursday come, and the week's gone.1665 R. Boyle v. v. sig. Kk7v A Colour'd suit, that, but last Week, would have been thought a fine one.1740 Countess of Pomfret in Countess of Hartford & Countess of Pomfret (1805) I. 208 As this is a week of great devotion and retirement with all good catholics, so it is a week of great idleness and equal retirement with us protestants.1752 S. Johnson No. 199. ⁋3 I have sat whole weeks without sleep by the side of an athanor, to watch the moment of projection.1837 W. Whewell I. 140 We may probably consider the week, with Laplace as ‘the most ancient monument of astronomical knowledge’.1837 C. Dickens xliii. 473 You couldn't make it convenient to lend me half a crown till the latter end of next week, could you?1849 C. Brontë I. i. 5 The present week is yet but at Thursday, and on Monday [etc.].1867 E. A. Freeman in W. R. W. Stephens (1895) I. 391 Last week I have been working at the early life of Lanfranc.1902 J. M. Robertson 71 Mithra..being the first of the seven planetary spirits on whose names the week was based.1965 6 Oct. 18/4 It's Wednesday and the week is half over.2004 Christmas 102/4 The study also found that site audiences vary according to the time of the day and day of the week.the world > time > period > a week > [noun] > in different societies 1604 E. Grimeston tr. J. de Acosta vi. ii. 435 They [sc. the Aztecs] accompted their weekes [Sp. semanas] by thirteene dayes, marking the dayes with a Zero or cipher. 1814 H. M. Williams tr. A. von Humboldt II. 123 The Muysca week [Fr. semaine] was distinguished from all known in the history of chronology; it had only three days. 1852 E. Greswell I. ii. vi. 182 The Romans had their week, as much as the Jews and Christians of antiquity; only the Roman week was one of eight days. 1916 3 32 The Egyptian week or dekad..consisted of 10 days. 1935 L. M. Larson in tr. Gloss. 415 In matters of law and public business the five-day week continued in use. 1963 L. W. Cowie xvii. 329 [The] new republican calendar, which fixed 22nd September 1792 as its beginning and had months named after the appropriate weather or crops and a ten-day week. This, however, was widely ignored by the French people. 2000 M. Diener in J. S. DeLoache & A. Gottlieb (2001) iv. 106 You will want to consult the pelelintangan chart that cross-references the five- and seven-day weeks of the Pawukon calendar. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] the world > time > period > a week > [adverb] the world > time > period > a week > [noun] > despite the time from which it is reckoned OE Acct. Voy. Ohthere & Wulfstan in tr. Orosius (Tiber.) (1980) i. i. 15 On sumum stowum swa brad swa man mæg on twam wucum oferferan. OE Byrhtferð (Ashm.) (1995) i. i. 2 Of þisum dagum beoð gesette twelf monðas, on þam beoð twa and fifti wucena æfter þære sunnan ryne. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon (Calig.) (1978) l. 11443 To feouwer wikene [c1300 Otho wekene] uirste þat wrec wes iuorðed. c1300 St. Francis (Laud) 431 in C. Horstmann (1887) 66 Seint Fraunceis was..in þe ordre twenti ȝer, And two ȝer and al-mest þreo wyke. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. ix. ix. 529 A moneþ conteyneþ foure wekis, and a woke seuene naturel dayes. a1450 (Faust.) (1883) l. 1662 He regnede not foure ȝere here, By sixe wykeus, as yche vnderstonde, Þat he nas martrid. c1466 J. Russe in (2004) II. 352 I thynke of euery day a wyke tyl ye be content. a1529 J. Skelton (?1530) sig. Ciiii I haue not kept her yet thre wokys. 1553 in J. D. Marwick (1871) II. 278 The expensis of the ulk precedand the xxvj day of Marche. 1615 R. Cocks (1883) I. 9 He hath byn in this place a wick, and never came into the English howse till now. a1616 W. Shakespeare (1623) ii. v. 36 So many Dayes, my Ewes haue bene with yong: So many weekes, ere the poore Fooles will Eane. View more context for this quotation 1734 A. Pope ii. ii. 93 A Buck was then a week's repast, And 'twas their point, I ween, to make it last. 1736 Bp. J. Butler i. i. 21 A Man determines,..that he will walk to such a Place with a Staff a Week hence. 1787 J. Hoy Let. 31 Oct. in (1809) II. 110 I should give him nought but Stra'bogie castocks to chew for sax ouks. 1825 G. Craddock Let. 29 Nov. in T. Sokoll (2001) 458 I have left the Hospital three weeks ago as uncurable. 1856 C. M. Yonge i. ix She was within six weeks of seventeen, and surely she need not be sent down again to the schoolroom. 1865 A. D. Whitney xlii Then there came a week of rain. 1928 P. G. Wodehouse i. 19 ‘What are you doing about two weeks from now?’..‘Nothing in particular. Just beetling around.’ 1933 15 Mar. 15/2 During the past week the Nazi steam-roller has passed over every one of the seventeen Federal States of the Reich. 1976 1 Apr. 438/2 Rats immunized in this way develop..a second chronic episode after 4 or more weeks. 2002 R. Shehadeh vi. 46 On Thursday began a week that would be one of the most critical in my father's life. 3. With prefixed word. Frequently with capital initial. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] > some particular week OE (Cambr. Univ. Libr.) xx. 17 (rubric) Ðys godspel gebyrað on wodnesdæg on þære oðre lenctenwucan. OE tr. Felix (Vesp.) (1909) xx. 161 Þa eft þan ylcan dæge on þære eastorwucan he þæt lif of þam lichaman sende. ?c1225 (?a1200) (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 57 Haldeð silence..in þe aduent..& þe swi[ȝen] wike [a1250 Nero swiðwike]. c1450 (c1430) (Galba) (1908) 437 In Cristemesse wike. c1500 in J. Cooper (1888) I. 259 One Wedinsday in ye penthicost owk nixt eftir ye synod. 1597 J. Gerard ii. 450 Milke woort..doth specially flourish in the Crosse or..Rogation weeke. 1662 S. Pepys 24 Mar. (1970) III. 51 I went to see if any play was acted, and I find none upon the post, it being passion week. 1710 Let. 28 Mar. in I. Newton (1975) V. 17 If you adiourn the Society for that, & the Holyday-Week, the Dr will be back ready to execute the Office of Secretary. 1736 J. Kelly I. 6 It was in the Christmas Week, When my Granny she sate by the Fire, She sent me to buy an Ox-Cheek, And I fell with it all in the Mire. 1826 T. Wright (ed. 2) 193 The Quarter Sessions are held here before the Recorder,..on Thursday after Epiphany week. 1912 Apr. 363 This year the Passover week is from the second to the ninth of April. 1981 Dec. 44/2 I even know my Nguzo Saba, the seven beliefs celebrated during Kwanza week. 2005 24 Mar. 11/3 For Holy Week each year, we bring out a marvellous set of Stations of the Cross, painted by an artist in the congregation. 1523–4 in H. Littlehales (1905) 322 Mr parson gave to them a playng weke to make mery. a1631 J. Donne (1959) V. 178 Doe not thinke to put off all to the washing weeke; all thy sinnes, all thy repentance, to Easter, and the Sacrament then. 1692 S. Pepys Let. Easter Monday in (1867) IV. 252 The last being Confession, this in all good conscience should be Restitution Week [i.e. when Pepys should return papers borrowed from John Evelyn]. 1761 G. Colman ii. 21 How unlucky it is, that this damn'd Accident shou'd happen in the New-market Week! 1797 15 July Swaffham Assembly will be on Wednesday, July 19th, 1797 (being Cricket Match Week). 1839 R. L. Venables xviii. 243 Indeed, the carnival-week is, strictly speaking, a commencement of the [Lenten] fast, or a sort of preparation for it. 1890 W. Booth ii. vi. 231 Self-denial..[which] the Soldiers of the Salvation Army practice every year in Self Denial Week. 1962 21 Apr. 3/3 It was in 1960 that Burnley won the title during Cup Final week in their last game, at Maine Road against Manchester City. 2011 3 Oct. 12/3 By happy accident, the opening of this irresistible two-gallery show..coincided with fashion week. 1892 22 Sept. Sweet Potato Week. At Hinman & Showers'. One bushel for $1.00. 1917 5 133/2 (caption) Native sons of the Golden West begin ‘Prune Week’ ceremonies. 1965 ‘E. McBain’ iii. 34 ‘How come everybody's so eager to join me this morning?’ Roger asked. ‘Who knows?.. Maybe it's national brotherhood week.’ 1977 Mar. 99/1 He won a prize for the best money-raising poster during Warships Week. 1996 Apr. 9/1 National Bike Week 1996..is the most important since the CTC launched National Cycling Week in 1923. 2000 (Inst. Adv. Motorists) Summer 39/1 Road Safety Week this year saw the Institute re-introduce the discount vouchers for Associates between 17–25. the world > time > period > a day or twenty-four hours > [noun] > week day > week or six working days OE Ælfric (Cambr. Gg.3.28) (2009) iii. 82 Gif se terminus bescyt on sumum dæge þære wucan, ðonne bið se sunnandæg þær æfter easterdæg. 1340 (1866) 212 Me let of bodiliche workes of þe woke uor betere to onderstonde to bidde god. c1390 (a1376) W. Langland (Vernon) (1867) A. vii. l. 243 For summe of my seruauns beoþ seke oþer-while, Of alle þe wike [c1400 Trin Cambr. wyke, a1425 Univ. Oxf. wowke, a1475 Harl. 875 weke] heo Worcheþ not so heor wombe akeþ. 1414–15 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt (1931) 121 John hath receiued paiement for lxxvj wokes. 1477 in E. Hobhouse (1890) 110 For mendyng of the organs for v wokes, labor..xs. 1603 W. Shakespeare i. i. 75 Why such impresse of ship-writes, whose sore taske Does not diuide the sunday from the weeke. 1649 No. 8. 69 All the week we are Slaves to the Independent, and on Sunday to the Presbyter. 1711 J. Addison No. 112. ¶1 Sunday clears away the Rust of the whole Week. 1797 tr. Chateaubriand in 22 App. 545 The temples are shut all the week, and a few short prayers compose the whole Sunday observance. 1882 W. Besant II. xxix. 240 On this Sunday morning, when the old man looked as if the cares of the week were off his mind. 1922 L. Mumford in H. E. Stearns 8 The factory whistle closes the week. 1978 E. Anderson (1981) iv. 115 Friday is payday for many of the regulars, and they usually pour into Jelly's to celebrate the end of the week. 2010 Feb. 32/1 The fish is now being eaten less frequently during the week and more at the weekend, suggesting it is perceived as more of a special purchase than an everyday food. 5. OE tr. Chrodegang of Metz (Corpus Cambr. 191) xxx. 231 Munecas sceolon ælcere wucan, and preostas ymbe þreo wucan don heora andytnysse heora bisceope. ?c1225 (?a1200) (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 254 Of alle þulliche þing schriue hire euche wike eanes edþe leste. a1325 (2011) xiii. 68 Te baillifs..eche woke, oþer eche forteniȝt ate leste, sullen maken enquestes of men herburgers. a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden (St. John's Cambr.) (1874) V. 415 He usede twyes a wooke [?a1475 anon. tr. twyes in a weke] to sitte al day to fore þe chirche dore. 1389 in R. W. Chambers & M. Daunt (1931) 54 Ȝif any brother falle in non power by auenture of godes sonde, & he haue paid to þe almes box his afferaunt, he schal haue eueri wyke of þe box to his sustinance xiiij d. a1425 (?c1350) (1964) l. 3058 (MED) Ilkone of us withouten lesyng Might win ilk wike fourty shilling. 1463 in (1841) 225 My masters gonner..schalle have every weke xij.d., and mete, and drynke, and beddynge. 1533 T. More Pref. f. iiiv And of this trayuayle.., I herd myche speech made, almoste euery weke. c1600 (?c1395) (Trin. Cambr. R.3.15) (1873) l. 13 Þe Lengþe of a Lenten flech moot y leue..And Wedenes-day iche wyke wiþ-outen flech-mete. a1632 T. Middleton & J. Webster (1662) v. sig. G2v The day after washing day, once a week, I see't at home. 1748 B. Robins & R. Walter ii. viii. 222 At Cheripe, there is a constant store of provisions prepared for the vessels who go thither every week from Panama. 1786 Mar. 262/1 Each professor is to read two hours in each week. 1826 R. Mills 428 The South Carolina Society..originated with a few French refugees, who met once or twice every week. 1902 17 May 6/4 There are many families who make it a habit to have a table collection each week for some religious or philanthropic work. 1984 14 May 42/2 How many times per week do you have sexual relations? On the average—just a ballpark figure. 2010 (National ed.) 12 Sept. (Week in Review section) 1/1 There were the ‘mad minute’ math quizzes twice each week, with the results elaborately graphed. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] > as a unit for reckoning work, etc. 1389 in J. T. Smith & L. T. Smith (1870) 18 (MED) Euery brother and sister shal payen, in ye woke, to ye kepers of yis fraternite, a ferthyng. 1426–7 in H. Littlehales (1905) 66 (MED) Payd to Thomas Seviere and his felawe to set vndir þe clerkis chamber dore þe..mason a hole woke, iiij s. iij d. 1492 in T. Dickson (1877) I. 205 And for alimos, gevin woulkly, of xxiiij wokkis, xlviij li. 1527 in (1836) IV. 473 After the rate of 18d by the wooke. 1552–3 in J. D. Marwick (1871) II. 342 Item to Andro Mansioun for half ane ulk's wage. 1557–8 in H. Littlehales (1905) 409 Payde to wyllyam Elssame for j quarter and vj wyekes the soms of xix s. vj d. 1580 Accts. of Thomas Fermor in (1851) 8 181 Pd for xii weickes bord for Mr. Richard Farmor and his man, at viis the weicke iiijli iiijs. a1687 W. Petty (1690) 101 The Wages of a..Labourer..is 4s. per week without Victuals. 1775 S. Johnson 13 June (1992) II. 224 The Ladies..pay each twopence a week to the box. 1784 26 May 4/1 (advt.) The above premises may be taken by the week, and entered upon immediately. 1842 C. Dickens I. iii. 141 The House is full of boarders,..many of whom..contract by the week for their board and lodging. 1882 W. Besant II. xxii. 113 And in two days more the week's rent would be due. 1886 C. E. Pascoe (ed. 3) ii. 39 A week's notice is the general rule before vacating rooms. 1914 ‘I. Hay’ xviii I have two thousand a year... I don't know how much that is a week, but I'll work it out some day in shillings and see. 1979 25 June 64/2 The tenants paid for six weeks of air conditioning and the landlord did not furnish six weeks of air conditioning. 2005 J. Connor (2006) xi. 200 He had been fined two weeks' wages for missing training. 6. In vague or indefinite use. the world > time > duration > shortness or brevity in time > [noun] > a short or moderate space of time eOE tr. Bede (Tanner) iv. xxviii. 364 Of ðæm mynstre uteode oft onwalge wucan [L. ebdomade integra], hwilum twa oððe ðreo; swylce eac oft ealle monðe þæt he ham ne hwearf. a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. vii. lviii. 414 Wiþ sixe wookes [L. septimanas] þat conteyneþ fourty dayes þe euel [sc. gout] is ful icured. c1405 (c1395) G. Chaucer (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 587 But thurgh his magyk for a wyke or tweye It semed that alle the Rokkes were aweye. c1422 T. Hoccleve Tale of Jerelaus (Durh.) in (1970) i. 174 My freend, aftir, I trowe, a wike or two That this tale endid was, hoom to me cam, And seide, [etc.]. 1550 R. Crowley sig. Avi How often hast thou gone whole dayes togither, whole weakes, yea whole yeres, and neuer thought once to loue hym aryght? 1568 ( D. Lindsay Satyre (Bannatyne) l. 1048 in (1931) II. 196 Than scho deit to, within ane olk or two. 1592 ‘C. Cony-Catcher’ sig. B4 Hir husband to make a voyage from home, & to stay a weeke or two. 1623 H. Mandeville Let. 28 July in S. M. Kingsbury (1935) IV. 254 I..wilbe..in my country cottage fr a week or two. 1680 39 Coming to a Town call'd Dunfreize, upon the Borders of England, they concluded there to rest for a Week or so. 1718 J. Quincy 362/1 Put all these together into Cong. iii. of Proof Sugar-Spirit, and let them stand a week or two, stirring the ingredients from time to time. 1786 J. Howard Let. 14 Mar. in R. Price (1994) III. 8 Your Phisicians who know nothing of the Climate send many Patients here, who die a few weeks after their arrival. 1884 12 May 4/4 Payment is usually made a week or so after the goods have been delivered. 1974 6 Sept. 1/4 Polling day was only a matter of weeks away. 1998 C. Worrall xxi. 212 Alex might be able to put him up for a week or two, just while he gets sorted. the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > a long time 1597 in (Wodrow Soc.) 424 Alas! the mounths, alas! the wkes and dayes, That I consum'd in foolishe sports and plays. 1652 tr. N. Fonteyn iv. viii. 242 Make an Injection, and wash the ulcerated part very often every day, till the paine cease, and the Ulcer be healed, though she continue the use thereof for weeks, months, and yeares. 1753 M. Mackenzie in (Royal Soc.) 47 385 To what purpose..keep ships in Sandgate-Creek for weeks, and even months, without landing and serening the goods? 1811 J. Austen II. vii. 120 He did feel the same, Elinor—for weeks and weeks he felt it. I know he did. View more context for this quotation 1891 ‘J. S. Winter’ vi. 41 ‘Oh, Vere is not going for weeks—weeks,’ declared Mrs. Jock with great decision. 1900 ‘O. Agnus’ (1902) iii. 77 Wiks and wiks I haven't zeen 'ee, my darlen. 1918 18 Apr. 183/2 The unbounded hospitality of a time when a few letters of introduction gave weeks of princely entertainment. 1979 May 130/1 It had been weeks since she'd had her hair done properly. 2008 E. Cressey & M. Fitzgerald Introd. p. xvii After weeks and weeks of working out using traditional bodybuilding methods, I might put on half a pound of muscle. 7. a1382 (Bodl. 959) (1959) Gen. xxix. 27 Fullfyll þe wike of days [L. ebdomadem dierum] of þis coupyll, & þis [sc. Rachel] forsoþe I schall ȝife to þe. a1382 (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. xxv. 8 Þou shalt noun-bre [read noumbre] to þee seuene wokes of ȝeris [a1425 L.V. woukis of ȝeeris, L. ebdomades annorum]. 1635 J. Bagwell (new ed.) at Week A weeke of weekes of years. 1724 T. Lewis II. iv. xviii. 587 At the End of seven Weeks, or a Week of Weeks. 1807 J. Spalding I. ii. v. 227 The Hebrews observed a week of days, and a week of weeks. 1892 F. E. Tower xvii. 339 The ‘seventy weeks’..from Artaxerxes' edict of restoration to the Messiah was just seven times the captivity period, or a week of decades of weeks of years. 1927 13 161 A week of centuries equalling the seven deadly sins of thy enemy, shall be numbered unto thee. 1960 18 Dec. c4/2 History..is very old and a week of days or a week of centuries passes. 2004 M. Lotker vii. 79 The holiday of Shavuot..begins fifty days (or a week of weeks plus a day) after Passover. the world > time > period > year > [noun] > period of specific number of years c1384 (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Dan. ix. 24 Seuenty weekis [a1425 L.V. Royal Seuenti woukis, ?a1425 L.V. Claud. gloss. here a wouke is nedis takun for a wouke of ȝeeris, and so ech wouk here conteyneth vij. ȝeer] ben abreggid on thi peple. 1482 W. Caxton tr. iii. iii. f. cxvijv For Gabryel sayd seuenty short wekes be vpon thy people that be wekes sette not of dayes but of yeres. 1577 M. Hanmer tr. Bp. Eusebius in vi. vi. 101 Aboute this time there florished one Iude, who published comentaries vpon the 70 weekes of Daniel. 1605 J. Dove 44 But these weekes are annuae hebdomadae, euery weeke is seauen yeares. 1787 B. Foster iii. 10 The Jews had special occasion to measure their time by weeks, or sevens of years. 1861 Jan. 391 It is obvious that the terminus a quo of Daniel's weeks is the year 533 B.C. 1916 Apr. 327 Daniel's weeks were now accomplished. It was time the Messiah..should appear. 2004 S. J. Grenz in B. D. Forbes & J. H. Kilde iv. 112 The seventieth prophetic week was delayed, ‘God's prophetic clock was stopped,’ and the church age began. Phrases P1. Noun phrases with of and another measure of time. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] a13821wike of days [see sense 7a]. 1560 Dan. x. 2 At the same time, I Daniel was in heauines for thre weekes of daies [a1382 days of three wekis]. 1560 Dan. x. 3 Til thre weekes of daies were fulfilled. a1591 H. Smith (1593) ii. D 1 b This worde Hebdomada..is sometimes taken for a weeke of daies, that is, seauen daies... But at other times it signifieth the space of seauen yeares, and then is it called Hebdomada Annorum, A weeke of yeares. 1611 Dan. x. 3 Three full weekes [margin, Heb. weeks of dayes] . View more context for this quotation] 1674 R. Fleming iii. 93 They know Daniels Seventy weeks..clearly takes in his [sc. the Messiah's] coming, and though it were taken either for weeks of days, or of years, it must be long since expired. 1725 B. Marshall Introd. 9 Daniel here speaks of ordinary Weeks or Weeks of Days, and not of..prophetical Weeks, or Weeks of Years. 1819 W. Scott Bride of Lammermoor ix, in 3rd Ser. I. 260 They dared not keep me a week of days in durance. 1876 tr. II. 336 A feast of heptads of days or weeks of days. 1918 June 60 We pass on to find in the Levitical Law a week of weeks of days leading to a fiftieth day—a Pentecostal Sabbath. 2011 C. Ben Avraham II. ii. 22 Daniel, knowing that confusion would arise in interpreting his fast, states that his fast was for three weeks of days, not three weeks of years! the world > time > period > year > [noun] > period of specific number of years a13822wokes of ȝeris [see sense 7a]. c1400 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden (Tiber.) f. 87 (MED) Þer buþ wokes yset noȝt of dawes bote of ȝerer so þt on woke conteyneþ seue ȝer. ?a1425 (Claud.) (1850) Dan. ix. 24 Gloss. [a1425 L.V. Seuenti woukis, L. septuaginta ebdomades] Here a wouke is nedis takun for a wouke of ȝeeris, and so ech wouk here conteyneth vij ȝeer. a1591 H. Smith (1593) ii. D 1 b This worde Hebdomada..is sometimes taken for a weeke of daies, that is, seauen daies... But at other times it signifieth the space of seauen yeares, and then is it called Hebdomada Annorum, A weeke of yeares. 1621 T. W. tr. S. Goulart 147 Doe wee not obserue how in three weeks of yeares three are dead? 1650 W. Sclater, Jr. in W. Sclater Ep. Ded. sig. A2 Having now, (by the space of full three weeks of years, and more)..had a strong dispute with my thoughts, whether [etc.]. 1674 R. Fleming iii. 93 They know Daniels Seventy weeks..clearly takes in his [sc. the Messiah's] coming, and though it were taken either for weeks of days, or of years, it must be long since expired, but if they should mean weeks of ages, then for many thousand years his coming could not be yet expected. 1725 B. Marshall ii. iv. 242 I see not how Dr. Prideaux can argue from those Sabbaths of Years in Levit. xxv. 8, to the Weeks of Years in this Prophecy. 1791 Nov. 110/2 The former part of the week, calculated for Christ and his immediate personal household, was on the scale of a week of years. 1865 1 161 The year B.C. 700, however, falls in the midst of a week of years, and was not sabbatical. 1903 27 Aug. 2/1 If there were only ten true believers in the world, and each made one good convert a year, and the twenty did the same and so on, four weeks of years would convert the whole world. 2009 H. L. Patterson xxxi. 319 The seventy weeks are interpreted as weeks of years, which total four hundred and ninety years. the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > a long time 1822 B. Hofland IV. iii. 66 But where ever have you been this week of Sundays? 1881 Dec. 692/2 But Jack had declared that morning that he could not hit a ball in a week of Sundays. 1898 ‘C. Hare’ i. ii. 13 Tes wark..never done, an' nar' a bit o' play for I,..no, not in a week o' Sundays. 1901 D. B. W. Sladen iv He..got to know her more intimately in that five minutes than he might otherwise have done in a week of Sundays. 2009 J. Greene 55 Finally, after what seemed like a week of Sundays, Mummy said, ‘Yes, they'll have you’. the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > a long time 1831 8 Jan. 57/3 No, you couldn't gess in a week of Saturdays and so I'll tell you—cause it is unginteel. 1921 June 13/1 In a week of Saturdays we couldn't hist the motor up the mountain. 2001 26 Apr. (Special Advertising section) 8/1 For a week of Saturdays last fall, I climbed a ladder, and..cleaned every last bit of green and black from the porch. the world > time > frequency > infrequency > [noun] > time or date which never comes 1766 H. Brooke I. Ded. p. xxvi At the time that the hogs shall..feed along with the herrings;..or on the week of the four Fridays, so long looked for by astrologians. P2. In expressions serving to specify a date or a time period. a. c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon (Calig.) (1963) l. 4019 Þe king lette blawen..& hehten heom alle..þas dæies æn þreom wiken [c1300 Otho þane dai a þreo wike] wenden to Lundene. 1454 in J. T. Gilbert (1889) I. 281 That al maner of men of Iryshe blode..avoyde [i.e. quit Dublin] by this day iiii. wekys. And gyff eny of this Iryssh blode..may be founde within the said cite or frauncheis after the said iiii. wekys day, they shall..be put in prisone. 1531 in I. S. Leadam (1911) II. 187 The same Court so adiorned to be kepte ther that day thre wekes next ensuyng. 1707 R. Gardiner (ed. 4) I. 21 Hillary Term beginneth..that day eight Weeks on which Michaelmas Term ended. 1781 36 332/1 Ordered, That the said Bill be read a Second Time on Tuesday Four Weeks. 1817 J. Austen 25 Mar. (1995) 337 She expects much about this day three weeks, & is generally very exact. 1864 G. Knox Diary 20 May in R. C. McMurray (2007) vii. 204 I have not had a change of clothing since yesterday two weeks. 1878 353 I think last Saturday a week was the first time I was in his cell. 1914 14 Feb. 25/2 I'll be home tomorrow two weeks. You come to dinner Sunday two weeks. 2001 B. Cullen (2004) xxii. 251 Well, yourself and Paddy Walsh will present yourselves at this address in James's Street on Saturday two weeks. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] > specific number of weeks the world > time > period > a day or twenty-four hours > [phrase] > seven days before or after a specific day 1680 E. Hookes 42 Mary Duncon, to have been called into the Court of Sessions this day week. 1781 June 303/2 Yesterday week, about four o'clock in the afternoon, Col. Delaney..marched from Morrissania. 1810 36 160 The whole of the money must be made good that night week. 1831 23 Sept. 4/4 Early on Monday morning week, an attempt was made [etc.]. 1857 T. Hughes ii. vi. 339 The crisis came on Saturday, the day week that Thompson had died. 1889 ‘J. S. Winter’ i Let us say Thursday week, dear—This is Saturday, so it is quite enough notice to give. 1957 F. O'Connor 19 May (1979) 220 Last Friday week I stood in a receiving line with your brother and sister-in-law for a good hour. 1990 25 Sept. 15/1 Reilly..is due to announce his..squad tomorrow week. 2004 D. Peace 80 However, Monday week, there will also be a Union family rally in the town. 1827 M. T. C. Gould 24 I think it took place on the 23d of August. I think four weeks yesterday. 1845 30 Dec. 7/2 A week last Friday, a two horse wagon..stopped at Powers' tavern. 1883 (Baptist Missionary Soc.) 1 Oct. 349 Only a week yesterday we put his earthly remains in the grave. 1922 17 456 Two weeks yesterday I attended a meeting at Scott's pond. 1950 P. H. Newby vii. 167 It'll be three weeks tomorrow that you came to us. 1984 6 Nov. 30/1 Ian Rush..rides again into Cardiff a week tomorrow but too late to rescue the Welsh national team. 2001 K. Muir (2006) v. 110 There's a sale of pups three weeks tomorrow. †b. the world > time > period > a week > [noun] 1398 in C. Innes (1837) 490 [Gif] defaut be of þir paymentis..ovre runnene ande ganeby sex wowkis daye eftir þe lymite terme. a1450 (Univ. Coll. Oxf.) (1912) l. 6634 (MED) This lyfe they ledde vj wokes day. 1523 Earl of Surrey in (1836) IV. 55 Thies 5 wekes daye, I never slepte one hole houre withoute wakinge, my myende is soo troubled. 1573 W. Smith (new ed.) iii. sig. B.iij There she abode, full iocunde and mery. For the space fully of. vi. weekes day. a1679 T. Hobbes Dialogue Common-laws Eng. 145 in (1681) Which Statute alloweth to these Provisors six weeks Day to appear. 1582 Sir J. Popham in H. Hall (1886) 262 I mene if God please to be at Salisburie the wekes-daie at night before Easterdaie. 1897 E. W. Hamilton xxix. 328 Why man, I'll warrant ye'll no be laid by for mair nor a week's day at the maist. P3. In expressions serving to specify a pattern of recurrence. ?1570 T. Ingelend sig. D.iiv And yet for all this, from weeke to weeke, For his stypende and wages he neuer cryeth. 1669 J. Dryden i. 7 Sir, we'll come by our own as we can; if you put us off from week to week thus. 1748 W. Hardy 19 He shall let one Nick upon the Spindle, and so from Week to Week he shall do the like. 1893 T. Fowler 51 The Steward of the Hall was one of the graduate-Fellows appointed, from week to week, to assist the Bursars in the commisariat. 1923 Jan. 5/1 From week to week one cannot detect the slightest cloud in the blue sky. 1959 12 Dec. 1090/1 Here the supplier takes responsibility for the stock and display from week to week. 2001 J. T. Hallinan xvii. 214 Her days off change from week to week. 1606 F. Johnson 57 Divers dayes (week after week) being so imployed for the convincing of him in all: the Church did then excommunicate him. 1745 J. Wesley 119 Who, Week after Week, spent the Lord's Day..in idle Diversions, and never troubled themselves about going to Church? 1847 W. M. Thackeray (1848) xxxvii. 331 The pertinacity with which the washerwoman..brought..her bills week after week. 1968 4 Apr. 445/2 It was not practicable to print anecdotes week after week about Lord Blank's personality and foolish views. 2010 C. Brownfield vi. 79 Week after week, new sets of orders arrived on our captain's desk. the world > time > period > a week > [adverb] > every specific number of weeks 1796 11 Each of the Stewards..shall visit him or them so being sick week and week about. a1835 D. Price (1839) x. 200 For some time past four or five of us had continued to keep mess alternately, week and week about. 1891 R. Kipling vi. 94 The girls were supposed to market week and week about. 1919 C. R. Allen (ed. 6) xlii. 338 Classes are usually organized in such a way that a period of shop work alternates with a period of instruction in non-shop work. The two most common arrangements are: (1) the half day period, and (2) the week and week about period. 1996 M. Henry 36 The children alternated, week and week about, their stints in these classes with their voluntary groups. 1815 Mar. 213/2 [They] take of their own accord more respite from labour, week in and week out, than the law exacts. 1888 Jan. 2 Twelve joiners..only received, in fact, 13s. a week, week in and week out. 1938 3 Dec. 17/5 Week in, week out, he's ‘steady’. 1960 J. Gunn x. 159 Smith and his friends used to hound Col, week in week out. 1995 E. Toman vii. 168 Week in and week out he claimed his place on the studio sofa, and week in and week out he harangued the dwindling viewers. 2010 21 Aug. 37/1 This is a space that must be filled week in and week out this summer, come what may. the world > time > duration > [adjective] > long-lasting or enduring 1879 28 July 7/4 It was a week to week tenancy. 1918 (65th Congr. 2nd Sess.) 226 Department records of hour-to-hour, day-to-day, and week-to-week output..enable us to easily ascertain the individuals who are falling off in their production. 1928 18 Aug. 93/1 Nor can space as a commodity be generally sold or purchased economically on a week-to-week basis. 1959 24 Jan. 92/2 The lightning flashed above Sinai, and in its glare, the starry-eyed observer, remote from the week-to-week grind of party work, saw a great machine, whirring smoothly to life. 1981 J. Sutherland i. 15 The bestseller lists... Their week-to-week attention singles out sensational books of the moment. 2005 B. Romanowski xii. 251 There were guys who could not maintain the level of intensity that I could on a week-to-week, game-to-game basis. P4. Other phrases. a. society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > Jewish seasons and feasts > Harvest festival, Pentecost > [noun] a1382 (Bodl. 959) (1959) Exod. xxxiv. 22 Þe solempnyte of wekis [L. sollemnitatem ebdomadarum]. c1384 (Douce 369(2)) (1850) 2 Macc. xii. 31 Thei..camen to Jerusalem, the solempne day of weekis [L. die sollemni septimanarum] neiȝinge. 1535 M. Coverdale xxxiv. 22 The feast of wekes. [So in 1611 and later editions.] 1593 T. Nashe f. 20 The feast of Tabernacles, the feast of sweet Bread, and the feast of Weekes. 1644 E. Arnold tr. D. Pareus 336 The first of their ripe fruits being then consecrated to God in the feast of weekes. 1683 N. Crouch 14 In the Feast of weeks the Priests heard a man walking in the Temple. 1728 36 The fiftieth day of the Omer is their Feast of Weeks, so called because it is kept at the end of seven Weeks. 1787 D. Shaw i. i. 117 The feast of weeks was another grand and solemn festival among the Jews. 1846 W. T. Wishart No. 4. 105 The festival of weeks is specified as one of the stated solemn occasions—2 Chron. VIII. 12, 13. 1891 M. Friedländer 393 The Feast of Weeks, the 6th and 7th of Sivan, commemorates..an historical event: the Law-giving on Mount Sinai. 1916 10 June 665/1 I shall attend services at the Reform Temple where I am told confirmation exercises will add new impressiveness to the solemnities of the time-honoured Festival of Weeks. 2006 Y. Natan I. iv. 467 Shavuot is also called Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost, and occurs in the third month called Sivan. the mind > emotion > love > amorous love > be in love [verb (intransitive)] > fall in love the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > snare, trap, entanglement > set a trap [verb (intransitive)] > be ensnared 1534 N. Udall f. 2 Captus est. He is taken, Or, he is in the snare, or he is in the lashe. And prouerbially, he is in for a birde, or he is in by the weke. 1546 J. Heywood ii. vii. sig. K This prouerbe shewth the in by the weeke. a1556 N. Udall (?1566) i. ii. sig. A.iijv He is in by the weke, we shall haue sport anon. 1598 W. Shakespeare v. ii. 61 O that I knew he were but in by th'weeke . View more context for this quotation 1612 J. Webster E 1 Enter Flamineo and Marcello guarded, and a Lawyer. Law. What are you in by the weeke. the world > action or operation > undertaking > undertake or set oneself to do [verb (intransitive)] > commit oneself 1592 A. Day 2nd Pt. Eng. Secretorie sig. H2v, in (rev. ed.) Yet now we be in, let vs goe to it by the weeke. the world > time > a suitable time or opportunity > untimeliness > [phrase] > too late a1616 W. Shakespeare (1623) ii. iii. 75 At seauenteene yeeres, many their fortunes seeke But at fourescore, it is too late a weeke . View more context for this quotation 1798 28 Sept. Most of our antique Beaux..acknowledged with a sigh that, for them, it was ‘too late a week’. 1826 W. Scott 4 Feb. (1939) 89 If she had her youthful activity, and could manage it, it..would amuse her. But I fear it is too late a week. 1829 W. Scott 18 Jan. (1946) 6 A sensible, powerful mind[ed] person, had a[t] 28 (rather too late a week) taken up the art of sculpture. 1903 Dec. 168 Now, it is decidedly ‘too late a week’ to change the Quebec Act and its consequences. 1879 C. M. Yonge III. xxxv. 764 In the existing state of affairs, a week was a long time, and that very Sunday brought the crisis.] 1893 July 453 A week is a long time in a newspaper office. 1962 G. Wolfskill 34 Shouse was reminded once more that in politics a week is a long time. 1966 5 146/2 Harold Wilson has said, in another connection: ‘A week is a long time in politics.’ But many Labour men believe that if the tide is to be turned it will require the change of policy outlined above. 1983 31 Aug. c11/2 A week is a long time in politics, an expression of the idea that unexpected developments can transform political fortunes. 1997 6 Dec. 7 A week is a long time in pop music and even longer on the world's most mad-for-it music weekly, where the zeitgeist can prove an elusive beast. 2011 (Nexis) 19 July (Final ed.) a36 With a week a long time in politics, think of what could happen between now and the tax taking effect on July 1, 2012. 1906 16 Nov. 6/4 (heading) The recipe of the week. 1937 16 Aug. 24 (caption) Strike picture of the week comes from Brooklyn, where a shipyard walkout..has dragged on since mid-June. 1960 10 Mar. 26 Salesman of the week... Jack Hall... tried to sell subscriptions to Collier's magazine, which went out of business several years ago. 1975 C. Hirschhorn 12/2 The film received splendid reviews.., scooping M.G.M.'s prestigious Marie Antoinette as the film of the week in The Times newspaper. 1986 11 Dec. a9/3 Television has its disease of the week. 1995 M. Matalin & J. Carville 256 Every Friday we named the Employee of the Week, who would get a gold star and a jar of barbecue sauce. 2010 4 Nov. 26/2 Random fact of the week: Lady Gaga takes up 10 petabytes of bandwidth on Google. Compounds society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [noun] > hireling > hired by the week or year 1662 c. 5 §17 No Master Weaver..shall..sett on worke above two Apprentices or any weeke-Boy to weave in a Lombe in the said Trade in worsted weaving. 1683 J. Moxon II. Dict. 373 The Press-man sometimes has a Week-Boy to Take Sheets, as they are Printed off the Tympan. 1792 T. Coke & H. Moore i. ii. 54 They read and considered the Greek Testament on the week evenings. 1812 Jan. 57/2 I preached here [sc. Warrington] five times; was always well attended; even the week evening congregations were large. 1863 246/1 246/1 There is also a Bible class conducted on a week-evening in the chapel. 1900 E. T. Fowler viii. 141 It is our week-evening service. 2007 (Nexis) 29 Mar. The timing of this game for 5.30 p.m. on a week evening makes one wonder if the powers-that-be are really serious about promoting hurling. the world > time > period > a week > [adjective] > specific number of times a week 1847 Ld. Lindsay I. p. clxviii I lay at the feet of Jesus,..yoking down my struggling flesh with week-long fastings. 1898 15 Sept. 6/4 The ladies, true to their week-long enthusiasm,..made the University College Theatre look very bright. 1983 J. Macy i. 17 I chaired a weeklong seminar on planetary survival issues. 2007 28 May 4/4 A week-long exchange of accusations and blame games. the world > life > source or principle of life > age > [adjective] > specific age the world > time > period > a week > [adjective] > specific number of times a week > that has lasted a week 1826 Nov. 658/2 The week-old fawn had left the doe's side but for a momentary race along the edge of the coppice. 1892 25 Mar. 8/5 If we obstinately shut our eyes and keep company with the hapless week-old kittens. 1903 R. Kipling 115 Out of the darkness we reach For a handful of week-old papers And a mouthful of human speech. 1935 P. G. Wodehouse xviii. 216 A certain brand of cigarette—one puff of which..will make a week-old corpse spring from its bier and dance the Carioca. 2002 J. Mercurio (2003) 195 A paediatrician killed a week-old baby because he flushed a tube with phenytoin that someone had left lying around. Derivatives the world > time > period > a week > [adverb] > by weeks c1175 (Burchfield transcript) l. 554 To serrfenn wukemalumm. c1175 (Burchfield transcript) l. 536 Drihhtin godd. To þewwtenn wuke malumm. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online June 2022). weekint.Origin: An imitative or expressive formation. Etymology: Imitative. Compare wheak v., whick v. Compare also later wee int. and queek int. the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Rodentia or rodent > superfamily Myomorpha (mouse, rat, vole, or hamster) > [interjection] > squeak (of a mouse) the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > order Artiodactyla (cloven-hoofed animals) > pig > [interjection] > sound made by 1594 W. Shakespeare iv. ii. 145 Weeke, weeke, so cries a Pigge prepared to the spit. View more context for this quotation a1632 J. Webster & W. Rowley (1661) iv. sig. F2 My Sow cryes week as if she had Pigs in her belly. 1719 T. D'Urfey II. 87 Weeck, Weeck, Weeck, squeak'd the Pig. 1855 R. Browning Fra Lippo Lippi in I. 35 Harry out..Whatever rat, there, haps on his wrong hole, And nip each softling of a wee white mouse, Weke, weke, that's crept to keep him company! 1913 E. M. Wright xviii. 309 This gurt pig zays, I wants meeat; T'other one zays, Where'll ye hay et? This one zays, In gramfer's barn; T'other one zays, Week! Week! 2011 C. Lewis (Electronic ed.) Continuous week week week squeal. Here comes supper at last. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < n.eOEint.1594 |