It is pride to not acknowledge that all the distinguishing advantages you have come from God. |
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She is introduced to Nelly, who has come in from the guest room dressed ready to begin the day. |
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Most self-titled discs come when a band first appears on the music scene, kind of like a blank slate for the band to build a name on. |
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This contributed to the idea that not everything that appears to come from discarnate spirits is necessarily so. |
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All variants come with disc brakes for the rear wheels and ventilated disc brakes for the front wheels. |
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Despite his ability for discernment and honesty, you still come away thinking he is stuck in a life of cliched fixations. |
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Gurus may come from any caste group, and Brahmins need not be spiritual guides, though many are. |
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The Guru had come to guide, govern and influence the lives of the Sikhs both in the temporal and the spiritual fields. |
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That did not come to an end until the cargo had all been discharged from the ship. |
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In the first place, it is important to realize that faith has always come enmeshed in a cultural context. |
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Let us, as Americans, examine Moore's arguments, weigh his disputations, and come to a fuller understanding of the issues he discusses. |
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The Senior National Officer for the union said they had come up against a brick wall when seeking talks with management over their disputes. |
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After attempting to come back in pre-season, the problem only got worse and he decided enough was enough. |
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I've always been able to come up with content easily enough, but had a hard time with the introduction. |
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After enquiring after each other's welfare they consulted at length and then returned to where they had come from. |
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The information center expects most inquiries to come in by phone or email. |
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The police are now carrying out door-to-door enquiries and urging people with information to come forward. |
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If she went in the back, she might come across some of the more disreputable characters that would turn her act into a reality. |
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That kind of information may come out at a fatality inquiry scheduled for the fall, he said. |
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If interested why not come along on Tuesday evening at 6.15 pm to The Women's Centre Main Street and enrol. |
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Nameless people, with murder on their hands, people who have disrobed women forcibly, come together. |
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But I have come to a conclusion about our fear and what we must do about it, and in part, this revelation entered my life just the other day. |
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Still, it's remarkable how far dubs of Asian films have come over the past few years. |
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I don't think I ever expected such a beautiful blend of dub, roots reggae and world music to come to my ears. |
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An increasingly isolated figure, he has come to rely on authorities whose expertise in the relevant disciplines is dubious. |
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Kathy is too angry and resentful to care and Josh has gradually come to grow indifferent toward his drunken distant father. |
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Some of them may have come into the profession attracted by the glamour of being singers and entertainers. |
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It's just too hard to try and enthuse people to come along if they don't really know what you're on about. |
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It is a bit like puzzling over how a mammal could come to lay an egg and then being shown a duck-billed platypus. |
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The club has come up with an attractive membership pack to entice new members. |
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In an information age, where time is of the essence, perhaps Poetry, the very distillation of life itself, has come into its own. |
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It invites a dozen or more distilleries to come in and take over the patio for a day. |
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The mood was euphoric as Ukrainians prepared to celebrate both New Year and a feeling that democracy had finally come to their nation. |
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The Saudis have in a very short while come up with their own highly distinctive style of management. |
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Whatever was flashing through the visibly disconcerted president's mind, he could not come up with a direct answer. |
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I always said they would come in handy for something, and they were perfect for guide rails down to the new kitchen. |
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The jobs would come from building guideways, or tracks, needed for the electromagnetic train. |
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Similarly, oxygen level had come down substantially in the lake also due to discharge of contaminated water into it. |
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He has come to his death by violence, and whilst in the discharge of his duty, by men doing an unlawful act. |
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If I make no order, if I make an order, the parties can always come back and either seek further order or seek discharge of the order. |
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Having finished his apprenticeship as a diesel mechanic, he had come to Australia in 1957 in the employ of the Commonwealth Government. |
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On most of his leaps, he was too discombobulated at first to think clearly, let alone to come up with such a clever story. |
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I may not have won a prize, but I took enough pictures to ensure I didn't come home completely empty-handed. |
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And if we had come out empty-handed it would not have been a very good thing. |
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And if that's not sweet enough for your tastes, come dessert time the chef will even pour Tia Maria on your gulab jamun. |
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You might see the disconnect sign a lot but there aren't any instances of massive warping that would normally come with a fast paced game. |
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The public should not be passive and gullible on this matter but come out in support of the law. |
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Yet they may have come across moments when they discovered a profound gap or discontinuity in their supposedly continuous self. |
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There is nothing to say that such unbounded economic growth will not come in discontinuous lumps. |
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And because in the years to come, I don't think much growth will be happening, you need to look for stuff that you can pick up at a discount. |
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These misconceptions have come not from people whose intentions include malice or discourtesy but from friends who are simply curious. |
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But although he has found the technology to come up with the tunes, he has struggled to discover vocalists to deliver the goods. |
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We'll try and play attacking football but not ridiculous gung-ho stuff and if the chances come, we've got to take them. |
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The Professor had come over and whispered discreetly that he'd like to see me in his office once I was done for the day. |
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Rumour has it that eminent politicians come here seeking discretion and peace. |
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Police are appealing for two men who might have seen a teacher shot by masked gunmen to come forward to help with their investigation. |
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New legislation which will make it illegal for businesses to discriminate against workers on grounds of age is due to come into force next year. |
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I used to hear gunshots every day and there were times when I just wanted to come home. |
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It's one thing to board the Titanic as it leaves port, but quite another to come on board when the water is coming over the gunwales. |
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But the most frequently recorded encomiums come from men and women in his own constituency. |
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He felt a small gurgle of laughter in the back of his throat, at let it come, slipping into a smirk and then morphing into a grin. |
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Others rest in flag-draped coffins or come home strapped to hospital gurneys. |
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I occasionally come over all gushy at the sight of the London traffic report. |
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I usually wear a size 12, and I was horrified that after wearing them for a couple of hours at work, they began to come apart at the gusset seam. |
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But it is hard to appreciate the famous smile when you come close to it, since the glass case encumbers your view. |
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For the next hundred years, scholars, theologians, and students will be pouring over the papal encyclicals that have come out of the Vatican. |
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Only when these issues have been addressed and the occupation has come to an end will democracy cease to be an empty concept. |
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The spokesman for the environmental group says the research has come to an end and should be concluded. |
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As this young soldier realises his life has come to an end, he stops and he thinks. |
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They insisted that although they still wanted negotiations to continue they had to regard them has having come to an end. |
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It was only as a result of a threat of legal action by the developer that the dispute had come to an end. |
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However, it turns out that the social-democratic electorate's patience has come to an end. |
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And all cowards come to a sticky end, sweetheart, whether you like it or not. |
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This week, as in previous years, a number of politicians some nice and some barely competent, have come to the end of the road. |
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There's no need to wait until you are at the end of your tether before you come here. |
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In the meantime, however, the time has come for us to make an end of him, and it is for that reason I requested you to visit me tonight. |
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I was sure it would come back after I had been left alone with my disfigurement for a while. |
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It's not the most appealing picture, but come on, she lived in the woods, she wore disguises, she begged for money in public. |
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That doesn't come until the next game, after she has rolled consecutive gutter balls in the same frame. |
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If this was the best the gutter press could come up with, allies avowed, then he really was home and dry. |
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But he's a gutty, gritty player who always seems to come up with a big play when his team needs it. |
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All the serving bowls, dishes in the dinner set will come with lids, he adds. |
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If that is so, the imposition of the prohibition order is the most cynical and dishonest edict to come out of local government in my lifetime. |
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By continuing to assert dishonestly your innocence in the removal of money you have compelled the family to come here and give evidence. |
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The gymkhana society are great supporters of the community so please come along and support them. |
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Whole families come there for workouts and to learn some gymnastic exercises that improve fitness. |
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They often come up with incredibly ingenious ideas and are always happy to engage in mental gymnastics. |
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Barely conceivable though this is, the deepening political disillusion may come to be a force to be reckoned with. |
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They have won just once and many disillusioned fans are wondering just where the next victory will come. |
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One dissatisfied customer leads to many disillusioned persons who will never come into your store. |
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In Frazer's case we can, I think, see how this process of disillusionment has come about. |
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For boredom and disillusionment come easier to those who have everything and more. |
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We both come up with designs, consult each other and the end result is a combined effort. |
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Despite my initial slight dislike of the idea, I had not only come to terms with it, but also started to like it. |
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The time to face the enemy had now come, he rallied his men into their battle formations. |
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It's at this point that we come to the dismal apprehension of why attention waned in the first place. |
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They take about three to five minutes to come to full brightness after they are energized. |
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Imagine dismantling an expensive film set that has not come out to the expectations of the art director. |
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Perhaps the time has come to take this a step further, by enforcing compulsory contributions on both employers and employees. |
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They come to be a part of a network of people that they connect with, engage with. |
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One would have thought that a rise in fascism would come from someone else exploiting the disorganisation of our old enemies. |
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My family didn't disown us but they wouldn't come near us because he was there. |
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Hopefully the disparate threads will be able to come together in the fourth and last volume of the show. |
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Heading into the home straight, all these disparate elements finally come together. |
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And somehow this engenders a sense that somebody is going to come after us. |
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These abuses have been obvious for a long time, and many engineers originally employed by British Rail warned us of the disasters to come. |
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Exasperated and frustrated, they dispersed in different directions, never to come together again. |
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Efflorescence is caused when soluble salts and other water dispersible materials come to the surface of concrete and mortars. |
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It has come to spread strange new tastes from an advanced enlightened civilization. |
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Because we come to like being praised and to hate being dispraised, praise and dispraise come to have an important secondary function. |
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From now on, most bankrupts will be automatically discharged after just one year instead of two to three years and, in some cases, discharge could come even earlier. |
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We will take a break and come back with more of our distinguished panel. |
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The signs weren't looking good last week but indeed after this past week's events I think it's safe to conclude that our time on this planet has come to an end. |
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His own company had to come back and bleed the radiators after the new pump was put in, because the sheer power of it shifted old limescale et al and gunged the system up. |
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I know it seems mean to be disillusioning you like this, but do you really think that he or she will come up to you and tell you how much they care? |
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They do not cease to exist even after the body has come to an end. |
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Youngsters have already come up with some of their own designs which cater for younger primary school age children up to teenagers who wanted more energetic activities. |
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And with these openings come employment opportunities for school leavers. |
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Harmonies come courtesy of three male singers while the percussion, bass and drums ensure the sound is wrapped in the rhythms of their Guinean ancestors. |
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If you look at the Government Model pistols sold by custom gunsmiths and some major manufacturers, you'll find that most of them come with a full length guide rod installed. |
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Since the setae occur in a cluster they appear to come from a single endite, which indicates that the appendage is probably a second rather than a first antenna. |
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History is littered with many an aimless younger sibling who has come to a sticky end through no fault other than the fact that he was the second born. |
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A guy rope had come loose and it was at the mercy of the wind. |
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We are more troubled with sickness, than comforted with health and so by the discommodity of sickness, we come to understand the commodity of health. |
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In a sandy gully bounded by low, fissured limestone sides, we come across a pogge and a long-spined scorpion fish, a tub gurnard and finally a lemon sole. |
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They won't come to see rows of monotonous pines and eucalypts. |
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And I come away from our conversations feeling far more energised and enthused than I do when talking to pretty young things who should, in theory, be more enticing. |
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The Englishwoman has come to dominate the British scene and she will be among the favourites this coming weekend, although her focus is likely to be Saturday's 8km race. |
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Fish will come to the surface and appear to gulp air, and snails, crayfish, and other organisms may actually climb out on the bank or up on emergent objects. |
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Once the moment has been enacted on stage, it can never come back. |
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The two unlikely and show-stealing turns come in Kris Kristofferson's haunted enactor of justice, and Keira Knightley's burned out piece of emotionally orphaned wreckage. |
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A new type of disfigurement has come to Britain's towns and villages. |
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I worked once on a research vessel in the Bahamas, and each afternoon at about three, a pod of dolphins surrounded the boat, enjoining us to come play. |
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That is a discourtesy to the Tribunal and it is also a great inconvenience to the Respondents who have come here today prepared to deal with the case at length. |
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The chief enforcers for the Falcons will come in the form of their pack. |
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The episode of Alexander's interview with the gymnosophists has come down to us in several versions, among which the one in Plutarch's Vita Alexandri is the most renowned. |
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