From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishweeklyweek‧ly1 /ˈwiːkli/ ●●● W3 adjective [only before noun] TMChappening or done every week a weekly current affairs programme twice-weekly flights —weekly adverb The magazine is published weekly.
Examples from the Corpus
weekly• weekly ballet lessons• The weekly claims numbers are now running at the highest level since April.• Each of these may make a daily or weekly contribution which interweave to form a family network.• When the survey started in 1975, the average weekly pocket money was 33 pence.• Weekly rates at the hotel start at $627.• Moreover, the practice of building vocabulary through weekly spelling tests in elementary school has been largely abandoned.• She would pay for his weekly ticket.weeklyweekly2 noun (plural weeklies) [countable] TCNa magazine that appears once a week → monthly a popular news weeklyExamples from the Corpus
weekly• The later pattern of weeklies was further complicated by the growth of free sheets.• The biggest drop was among the Sundays - a massive 10 million sales - and the weeklies.• Commercial journals, particularly the weeklies and monthlies, can take rapid decisions, and have a faster turn-round time.• The local press, particularly the weeklies, aren't usually engaged in sensational journalism.• He said the weekly is profitable, but declined to disclose details.