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Consider and jar
Consider this jar of marbles as the starting population.

Consider and containing
Consider a list with items and with R1 and R2 being registers containing, respectively, the address of the current ( say C ) list item and a work register containing the XOR of the current address with the previous address ( say C ⊕ D ).
Consider a room with sound stations for multiple users, each station containing a microphone and a loudspeaker.
Consider a membrane containing only a single " a " symbol, and the two rules a → ab and a → aδ.
Consider a solution containing the analyte, A, in the presence of some conductive buffer.
Consider the following expressions from first order logic over a signature containing a constant symbol 0 for the number 0, a unary function symbol s for the successor function and a binary function symbol + for addition.
Consider an urn containing blue and yellow balls.
Consider a plate with dimensions containing a crack of length.
Consider, for example, a computer chassis containing three cards with fundamental natural frequencies of aHz, bHz, and cHz, and a screen with a predicted frequency of dHz.

Consider and N
Consider the unitary form defined above for the DFT of length N, where
Consider the number N ( r ) of balls of radius at most r required to cover X completely.
Consider a state of the system, described by the single particle states ..., n < sub > N </ sub >.
Consider an unsorted database with N entries.
If S is compact but not closed, then it has an accumulation point a not in S. Consider a collection consisting of an open neighborhood N ( x ) for each x ∈ S, chosen small enough to not intersect some neighborhood V < sub > x </ sub > of a.
Consider a quantum ensemble of size N with occupancy numbers n < sub > 1 </ sub >, n < sub > 2 </ sub >,..., n < sub > k </ sub > corresponding to the orthonormal states, respectively, where n < sub > 1 </ sub >+...+ n < sub > k </ sub >
Consider a rigid regular, crystalline, i. e. not amorphous, lattice composed of N particles.
Consider a system of N qubits that is coupled to a bath symmetrically.
Consider a graph G with vertices V, each numbered 1 through N. Further consider a function shortestPath ( i, j, k ) that returns the shortest possible path from i to j using vertices only from the set
Consider an MDCT with 2N inputs and N outputs, where we divide the inputs into four blocks ( a, b, c, d ) each of size N / 2.
Consider the set of all nilpotent elements of R, which will be called the nilradical of R ( and will be denoted by N ( R )).
Consider N systems in adiabatic isolation from the rest of the universe, i. e. no heat exchange is possible outside of these N systems, all of which have a constant volume and composition, and which can only exchange heat with one another.
Consider a sphere B < sub > 2 </ sub > of radius 2 centered at N. The inversion with respect to B < sub > 2 </ sub > transforms B into its stereographic projection P.
Consider a linear polymer to be a freely-jointed chain with N subunits, each of length, that occupy zero volume, so that no part of the chain excludes another from any location.
# Quadratic residue code: Consider the set N of quadratic non-residues ( mod 23 ).
Consider the translates t + N of this subset.
Consider the special case N = 1.
Consider an integer N and a non-negative monotone decreasing function f defined on the unbounded interval < nowiki >

Consider and lottery
Argument from rarity – Consider this case: a lottery winner is accused of cheating, based on the improbability of winning.

Consider and tickets
Consider a raffle where a single ticket wins a prize of all entry fees: if the prize is $ 1, the entry fee will be 1 / number of tickets.

Consider and from
Consider the equipment needed to protect this many from the weather, to make their cooking easy and their sleeping comfortable.
Consider what follows from the positivist view.
Consider the sample ( 4, 7, 13, 16 ) from an infinite population.
Consider a complete orthonormal system ( basis ),, for a Hilbert space H, with respect to the norm from an inner product.
* Consider the set of all functions from the real number line to the closed unit interval, and define a topology on so that a sequence in converges towards if and only if converges towards for all.
Consider the logarithm function: For any fixed base b, the logarithm function log < sub > b </ sub > maps from the positive real numbers R < sup >+</ sup > onto the real numbers R ; formally:
< li > Consider the group ( Z < sub > 6 </ sub >, +), the integers from 0 to 5 with addition modulo 6.
Consider the following quotation from Groucho Marx:
Consider the case of an airfoil accelerating from rest in a viscous flow.
Consider a function from a metric space M to a topological space V, and a point c of M. We direct the set M
Consider a point, P, such that light that is initially travelling parallel to the axis of symmetry is reflected from P along a line that is perpendicular to the axis of symmetry.
Consider that published average values of avoided pump failures range from $ 2600 to $ 12, 000.
Consider a function that takes no parameters and returns input from the keyboard.
Consider a light ray passing from glass into air.
Consider three things being pulled by the moon: the oceans nearest the moon, the solid earth, and the oceans farthest from the moon.
Consider now the acceleration due to the sphere of mass M experienced by a particle in the vicinity of the body of mass m. With R as the distance from the center of M to the center of m, let ∆ r be the ( relatively small ) distance of the particle from the center of the body of mass m. For simplicity, distances are first considered only in the direction pointing towards or away from the sphere of mass M. If the body of mass m is itself a sphere of radius ∆ r, then the new particle considered may be located on its surface, at a distance ( R ± ∆ r ) from the centre of the sphere of mass M, and ∆ r may be taken as positive where the particle's distance from M is greater than R. Leaving aside whatever gravitational acceleration may be experienced by the particle towards m on account of ms own mass, we have the acceleration on the particle due to gravitational force towards M as:
Consider these three things we say about God: first, God is a spirit ; second, God is the creator of the world ; and third, God exists apart from space and time.
Consider a space ship traveling from Earth to the nearest star system outside of our solar system: a distance years away, at a speed ( i. e., 80 percent of the speed of light ).
Consider a system in which voters can vote for any candidate from any one of many parties ; suppose further that if a party gets 15 % of votes, then that party will win 15 % of the seats in the legislature.
Consider the two endpoints of a rod of length L. The length can be determined from the differences in the three coordinates Δx, Δy and Δz of the two endpoints in a given reference frame
Suppose that U: D → C is a functor from a category D to a category C, and let X be an object of C. Consider the following dual ( opposite ) notions:

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