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Wiktionary
take into account

vb. (context idiomatic English) To consider or regard; to include (as in an estimate or plan) or pay attention to; to notice; to allow for.

WordNet
take into account

v. allow or plan for a certain possibility; concede the truth or validity of something; "I allow for this possibility"; "The seamstress planned for 5% shrinkage after the first wash" [syn: allow]

Usage examples of "take into account".

I had failed to take into account that if her theory was true, if she was a human who had been neuro-chemically programmed into believing she was a synthetic that thought it was human, then why wouldn't her response to the verbal commands hold true to the technical documentation?

Not a single one of its calculations will take into account catalytic superbombs with a yield of 300 million tons of TNT.

Obviously, we must take into account the primordial substructure and arrange for the upholding of culture by methods which will stand the acid test of stress and conflicting ambitions.

However, I failed to take into account that by including so many images in the magazine itself, it became difficult for many people to download in a reasonable timeĀ—.

We must take into account as the end all that really exists and all clear evidence of sense to which we refer our opinions.

It would have to take into account that Tex had no horse and Marie had no hair.

And if we take into account the general result which the criminal law is intended to bring about, we shall see that the actual state of mind accompanying a criminal act plays a different part from what is commonly supposed.

In considering this question, it is not unimportant to take into account the statistics of marriage, so far as they have yet been obtained, in England and Wales.

She did not take into account the imprecision with which her brain rendered what it received.

You should take into account whether the ignorant person has been given the opportunity for learning, and even if he has had that opportunity, it would still depend on the degree of wisdom possessed by the caretakers of knowledge.

This view does not take into account (1) the possibility of redundant function.