Words exist to label periods of time - like week which represents 7 days and fortnight which is used for a 14-day period. Are there other such words used for certain numbers of consecutive days?
KRIS-TV: Up to 100,000 people attended the Buc Days Night Parade and Stadium Show in Corpus Christi this past Saturday
Between 80,000 and 100,000 people attended the Buc Days Night Parade and Stadium Show in Corpus Christi this past Saturday.
Up to 100,000 people attended the Buc Days Night Parade and Stadium Show in Corpus Christi this past Saturday
KIII-TV on MSN: Corpus Christi's Buc Days Night Parade celebrates community, tradition, and generations of memories
Leopard Street buzzes with tradition as the Buc Days Night Parade kicks off in Corpus Christi.
Corpus Christi's Buc Days Night Parade celebrates community, tradition, and generations of memories
AOL: These streets will be closed for 2026 Buc Days, Rally Night Parade
These streets will be closed for 2026 Buc Days, Rally Night Parade
Dread Central: 30 Days of Night Becoming an All-New, Ongoing Comic Series
IDW Publishing has announced an all-new, ongoing 30 Days of Night comic book series starting in October. Original co-creator Steve Niles returns to his first creation with this latest chapter in the ...
Is if you're treating the two days as a single length of time; are if you're treating them as multiple lengths of time.
Two days "is" or "are"? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
This same question was recently asked by you on English Language Learners wasn't it? I believe the answer there was that none of them are correct because all of them should say, "the Internet". Once that is fixed, then the only viable sentences are the ones that use "for the last few days", "in the last few days" and "in a few days". Although the meaning of the last one is different.