I want to remind you to lock all the doors, and even more importantly, to keep the emergency phone numbers list at hand.
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Yes, "More importantly, we need to consider the impact of our decisions on the environment."
Most importantly, I want you to remember to drop this off at the post office.
The adverb of the word "important" is importantly.An example sentence is:And more importantly, you broke the law.
most importantly, more importantly
If the word after more importantly is a proper noun, then it should be capitalized. Example: More importantly, Raizza should be there first thing in the morning. More importantly, the guests should be there first thing in the morning.
Yes it does. More importantly on some devices it consumes your data.
basically, an email account. and more importantly you should know how do to use it.
"Primarily" or "mainly" could be substitutes for "first and foremost" in a sentence.
No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.No, it would have been against the rules and more importantly against their oath.
Yes, in Spanish you can use the letter 'y' more than once in a sentence. For example, "Juan y María van al cine y luego van a cenar."
Example sentence - We wanted more water to quench our thirst.