- week number
- n.Kalenderwoche f.
English-german dictionary. 2013.
English-german dictionary. 2013.
Number Ones (Michael Jackson album) — For other uses, see Number 1 s (disambiguation). Number Ones Greatest hits album by Michael Jackson Released … Wikipedia
Number 96 (TV series) — Number 96 Title card from a 1975 episode of Number 96. Where the cliff hanger resolution that followed this shot at the start of the episode took place in one of the building s flats, the shot of the building would zoom in on that flat as the… … Wikipedia
Number 1 (Tinchy Stryder song) — Number 1 Single by Tinchy Stryder featuring N Dubz from the album Catch 22 Against All Odds B side Stuck on … Wikipedia
Week Ending — Week Ending... was a satirical radio current affairs sketch show, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4, usually on Friday evenings. It was devised by writer/producers Simon Brett and David Hatch, and was originally hosted by Nationwide presenter… … Wikipedia
Number Ones (Janet Jackson album) — Number Ones / The Best Greatest hits album by Janet Jackson Released November 17, 2009 (see … Wikipedia
Number One Enemy — Single by Daisy Dares You featuring Chipmunk from the album Rush Released 1 March 2010 … Wikipedia
Number One Hits — Greatest hits album by Tim McGraw Released November 30, 2010 … Wikipedia
Number One (magazine) — Number One 1988 cover of Number One featuring pop group Bros Categories Music, teenage Frequency Weekly First issue March 1983 … Wikipedia
number one — number one1 noun singular 1. ) the person or thing that is first in order or importance: The team is number one in the regional game. 2. ) in popular music, the record that has sold the most copies in a particular week 3. ) MAINLY SPOKEN used for … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
number one — number ones 1) ADJ: ADJ n Number one means better, more important, or more popular than anything else of its kind. [INFORMAL] The economy is the number one issue by far... By the way, I m your number one fan. 2) N COUNT In popular music, the… … English dictionary
number of — The expression a number of + plural noun, as in a number of people, normally takes a plural verb in both BrE and AmE, because the plural noun is regarded as the ‘head’ of the noun phrase and therefore as the real subject: • There have been a… … Modern English usage