Secondly in a sentence

We found 11 examples of how to use secondly in an English sentence.

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Sentences with secondly

Sentences 1 to 11 of 11.

# Sentence  
1. Secondly, some of the Creoles may become independent "national languages" in their own right.
2. Secondly, the literacy rate in Europe of that time was low.
3. You can tell this is college radio. First of all, they actually play records; secondly, they keep playing them at the wrong speed.
4. Firstly: We, your forebears, cannot help you from the land beyond. Secondly: The slayer of wheelchairs came here incognito and therefore could only have brought a small number of guards with him. And thirdly: there is (supposedly) no beautiful princess. Got all that? Well, then have fun with your task.
5. Secondly, is there any project scheduled to be released today?
6. By "nationalism" I mean first of all the habit of assuming that human beings can be classified like insects and that whole blocks of millions or tens of millions of people can be confidently labelled "good" or "bad." But secondly — and this is much more important — I mean the habit of identifying oneself with a single nation or other unit, placing it beyond good and evil and recognizing no other duty than that of advancing its interests.
7. Secondly, we must take steps to correct these errors.
8. Firstly, he is your father, secondly, he is very sick. Tom, you must absolutely help him!
9. I have even studied the grammar of Esperanto to understand what it’s about, and I came to two conclusions. It is a very, very well-made language. From the linguistic viewpoint, it really follows admirable criteria of economy of language and efficiency. Secondly, all other movements for international languages have failed, but not that of Esperanto, which further unites humanity everywhere in the world, because behind Esperanto is an idea, an ideal.
10. Secondly, opponents of the measure believed the president did not have the authority to call a national Thanksgiving because that was a matter for governors.
11. The shortcoming in infancy is, first off, not knowing the horrible, and secondly, fearing that which should not be feared. The same occurs to the natural man; he ignores where horror truly lies, where the grips of trembles never falter, but rather, shivers at what is not horrible.

Words like secondly


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