Betekenis van:
importantly
importantly
Bijwoord
- veel, aanzienlijk, beduidend, belangrijk
- in an important way or to an important degree
"more importantly, Weber held that the manifold meaning attached to the event by the social scientist could alter his definition of the concrete event itself"
Synoniemen
importantly
Bijwoord
- in an important way
"for centuries jellies have figured importantly among English desserts, particularly upon festive occasion"
Voorbeeldzinnen
- She's cute, and more importantly, has class.
- She's beautiful, smart, and - most importantly - has a good heart.
- It's cute, and more importantly, of good quality.
- Never mind that. More importantly, if we don't go soon the time-limited sales will finish.
- She's what you call a "delinquent mom," but she's good at cooking, and most importantly, she's a really caring parent.
- The lawgivers wanted women to work in traditionally male occupations. Equally importantly, the lawgivers wanted men to work in traditionally female occupations.
- That’s risky, as situations which require both serious calculations and confrontations with those individuals prove. While challenging, this leads to constructive discussions about easier and more lucrative ventures. Importantly, this applies as much to your time and affections as it does to hard cash.
- More importantly the obligation applies only for bovine animals.
- But more importantly, reimbursements did not abide by the initial schedules.
- More importantly, it requires only the coordination by two players, Areva and Urenco.
- Importantly, the Commission notes that no action was taken subsequent to the National Debt Office's report.
- More importantly, no data were available which would have allowed the determination of an individual duty.
- More importantly, the parties failed to identify any better and yet practical methodology to facilitate the comparability.
- Importantly, the Commission also stated that it had not received a market survey from the Polish authorities.
- Finally and most importantly, the State is not profit-driven when levying taxes and does not act in a commercial manner or with commercial considerations when doing so.