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Suppose I hadn't brought along enough money??
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Brown Corpus
Some Related Sentences
Suppose and I
and I asked myself a question: Suppose I had the same number of peas as there are atoms in my body, how large an area would they cover??
Suppose a person states ; " I believe that trinini exist, but I have absolutely no idea of what trininis are.
Mendelssohn answered in an open letter in December 1769: " Suppose there were living among my contemporaries a Confucius or a Solon, I could, according to the principles of my faith, love and admire the great man without falling into the ridiculous idea that I must convert a Solon or a Confucius.
Suppose then that each player asks himself or herself: " Knowing the strategies of the other players, and treating the strategies of the other players as set in stone, can I benefit by changing my strategy?
Suppose G is an ordered abelian group, meaning an abelian group with a total ordering "<" respecting the group's addition, so that a < b if and only if a + c < b + c for all c. Let I be a well-ordered subset of G, meaning I contains no infinite descending chain.
:" Moses said to God, ' Suppose I go to the Israelites and say to them, " The God of your fathers has sent me to you ," and they ask me, ‘ What is his name ?’ Then what shall I tell them ?” God said to Moses, “ I AM WHO I AM " — Exodus 3: 13-14 ( New International Version ) ( see Tetragrammaton ).
Suppose the entries of Q are differentiable functions of t, and that t = 0 gives Q = I. Differentiating the orthogonality condition
Suppose and brought
Suppose and along
Suppose that a worm crawls along a 1 metre rubber band and, after each minute, the rubber band is uniformly stretched by an additional 1 metre.
Suppose an observer looks along an arbitrary axis in the direction of increase and sees flow crossing the axis from left to right.
Suppose that P ( t ) is a curve in S. Naïvely, one may consider a vector field parallel if the coordinate components of the vector field are constant along the curve.
Suppose we parallel transport the vector first along the equator until P and then ( keeping it parallel to itself ) drag it along a meridian to the pole N and ( keeping the direction there ) subsequently transport it along another meridian back to Q.
Suppose a particle moves at a uniform rate along a line from A to B ( Figure 2 ) in a given time ( say, one second ), while in the same time, the line AB moves uniformly from its position at AB to a position at DC, remaining parallel to its original orientation throughout.
Suppose w = z < sup > 1 / 2 </ sup >, and z starts at 4 and moves along a circle of radius 4 in the complex plane centered at 0.
Let M be a differentiable manifold and p a point of M. Suppose that f is a function defined in a neighborhood of p, and differentiable at p. If v is a tangent vector to M at p, then the directional derivative of f along v, denoted variously as ( see covariant derivative ), ( see Lie derivative ), or ( see Tangent space # Definition via derivations ), can be defined as follows.
Suppose that the curve γ is parameterized with respect to its arclength s. Then the arclength along the evolute E from s < sub > 1 </ sub > to s < sub > 2 </ sub > is given by
Suppose that there are two competing shops located along the length of a street running north and south.
Suppose that an earthquake had occurred along the Kego fault within the last 2000 years, the risk would be unchanged.
Suppose that the Borel transform converges to an analytic function near 0 that can be analytically continued along the positive real axis to a function growing sufficiently slowly that the following integral is well defined ( as an improper integral ).
Suppose a librarian were to store his books alphabetically on a long shelf, starting with the A's at the left end, and continuing to the right along the shelf with no spaces between the books until the end of the Z's.
Suppose that there are two reference frames S and S < nowiki > '</ nowiki >, where S < nowiki > '</ nowiki > is moving relative to S. The origin of S < nowiki > '</ nowiki > moves along some curve in S, which can be traced out by some vector C which is a function of t. The Einstein force is the apparent force acting on a particle of mass m in the S < nowiki > '</ nowiki > frame, and is defined by
Suppose and enough
Suppose that the equivalence problem has been through the loop enough times that no further reduction is possible.
Take, in order, just enough positive terms so that their sum exceeds M. Suppose we require p terms – then the following statement is true:
Suppose and money
Suppose you spend your days and nights in an office, working at not entirely pleasant activities, such as entering data into a computer, and this, all for money.
Suppose and ?
Suppose they both had ventured into realms which their colleagues thought infidel: is this the way gentlemen settle frank differences of opinion??
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