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Let's start from the start. You have told us that the players behind you limp in. Do the players yet to act allow you to limp in, or do they raise you? That's actually the number one consideration here.
And number two is, if you do raise, how do the limpers behind you react to pre-flop raises from you? That's consideration number two.
Consideration three is what hand you have. Notice this. You need to know what the other people are going to do to determine what you want to do. There are situations where it may be correct to fold, limp, or raise, but it is based on what you understand about what the table is communicating to you.
Having said that, in general and subject to your reads, suited connectors play best in multiway pots. Thus, those are the type of hands that you might look to limp in with.
Hands like A9o and KQo play best when you can isolate players. If you can't do that, they play second best when you may get a lot of callers, but they are calling a raise with weak hands. They play bad when they are dominated or there are better hands out there that are seeing the flop.
So, with A9o, you want to figure out what is within the other players' limping range. If it's fairly narrow, you have to worry a bit about this hand, because someone may have you dominated with AT-AQ or even AK. On the other hand, if the players behind you often limp in with Ace-rag, than A9o can be a great hand to raise even against several limpers.
Similarly, KQo is usually a raise in late position, but, again, that depends a little bit on what the players behind you are willing to limp in with.
Thus, the most general level of advice I can give you is that A9o and KQo are both hands that you should be looking to either raise or fold in limped pots, more likely raised, depending on what your reads tell you about what's going on elsewhere on the table. The fact that these hands often miss the flop and you have to end up folding them at some point doesn't matter-- as long as you are getting calls from worse hands and controlling the action with your raise, you are probably making a positive expected value play in the long run.
But neither hand is really a good limping hand.
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