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The phrase "a desperately important" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize the critical nature of something that requires urgent attention or consideration.
Example: "The report highlights a desperately important issue that needs to be addressed immediately."
Alternatives: "an extremely important" or "a critically important".
Exact(5)
"This is a desperately important question," he said.
Allowing the dying to escape unbearable last days of suffering is a desperately important matter.
"We're not going to do anything about it because it's not a desperately important call," said the sergeant.
"We've got two weeks now to get ourselves prepared for the next game, it's a desperately important game for getting the first two points of the season".
They had the opportunity to lead a desperately important conversation but immediately painted themselves into a corner and completely shut down, ceding the public discourse to the RNC's aggressive communications machine and a city mayor goofy enough to suggest that the Battle of Beaumont-Hamel was fought so that cops could march in the Pride Parade.
Similar(55)
Which was confusing, as there weren't any desperately important connections – other than the obvious one of life expectancy – being made between serving time on death row and elsewhere.
By increasing demand for bonds created out of mortgages, for example, the Fed encouraged the supply of homeloans and cut their prices - thus sparking a revival in the US housing market, a market so desperately important to consumer confidence and the strength of the American economy.
"And having a child was so desperately important for both of us".IVF already beats the old-fashioned way of getting pregnant, with a quarter of all attempts resulting in a baby.
This might sound like an administrative quibble, but it's desperately important: women's financial independence was the reasoning behind the original setup.
What earlier felt desperately important now seems like a retirement activity at most.
One: no job on earth – not even my desperately important one of concocting a series of snarky comments about people who have been making television with commitment (though a full 15% of it is, as it happens, woeful dreck) – no job is worth dying for, even if you're on deadline.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com