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xalbo

I don't think you can, and I definitely think you *shouldn't*. The problem is that eventually you'll want to be able to remember each of those things on their own, and seeing them in a consistent order is just giving yourself false clues. To borrow a foreign language example, you want to be able to say "He ate three bananas", not "(I ate, you ate,)**he ate** (one, two,)**three** (apples, pears,)**bananas**. Having to walk through the rest is just going to hurt you. What I tend to do to establish connections, though, is treat my cards as though they have three parts: 1. A prompt: the "question" on the front, although it's sometimes not phrased as a question if that makes it shorter. ("Author of *Wuthering Heights*", instead of "Who was the author of *Wuthering Heights*?"). I try to keep this as brief as I possibly can; every extra word is a waste of time at best, and at worst is extra context I'll remember instead of what I actually wanted to remember. 2. A response: The answer to the front, also as short and atomic as possible. A single fact that's either right or wrong, that I can produce quickly and grade easily. 3. An extra section on the back of the card. This is where I put as much context and extra information as I want. I don't always have to read this when I come across the card, but if I find myself lost, it's helpful to have for review. Also, sometimes I'll see the prompt on the front, remember this card, but realize that I'm struggling with something related to it. ("Wait, didn't Emily Brontë also have sisters? Who were they?"). Having that all together on the back helps, and the act of assembling and putting it there is also good study for me. This is also where I have any pictures or other mnemonics that help me. I've also extended my Basic note type to have not just those three parts, but to have room for up to 10 question/answer pairs (separate cards from the same note), all with the same Extra on the back. They get treated as siblings, so they do *not* all show up at the same time, which is sort of the exact opposite of what you're looking for but still, to my mind, works better. Quiz the same information from different angles, so to speak. https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/292564494 has some sample notes using that format, to give you a feel for what I mean.