Ap Flashcards
6239442183 | vietnam | nagtagumpay sa labanan sa Bach Dang River | 0 | |
6239442184 | animismo | paraan ng pamumuhay ng vietnam | 1 | |
6239442185 | ngo quyen | pinuno ng vietnam | 2 | |
6239442186 | emperor royal magsasaka manggagawa | uri ng lipunan sa vietnam | 3 | |
6239442187 | dinastiya ng Han | dahilan ng pagbagsak ng vietnam | 4 | |
6239442188 | dinh, thanh thoang | ano ano ang naambag ng vietnam | 5 | |
6239442189 | cambodia | nasakop ang vietnam, thailand at laos. | 6 | |
6251062648 | pagsasaka at pagaani | paraan ng pamumuhay sa cambodia | 7 | |
6251062649 | jayarvaman II at VII ; suyarvaman II | mga pinuno ng cambodia | 8 | |
6251062650 | pinuno magsasaka mandirigma | uri ng lipunan sa cambodia | 9 | |
6251062651 | pagkamatay ni jayarvaman VII ; pagsalakay ng thai | dahilan ng pagbagsak ng cambodia | 10 | |
6251062652 | angkor wat | ano ang naambag ng cambodia? | 11 | |
6251062653 | myanmar | nandayuhan at nanirahan ang mga mon at tibeto-burman; imperyong pagan | 12 | |
6251062654 | pagsasaka at pagpapastol | paraan ng pamumuhay | 13 | |
6251062655 | king anawrahta | pinuno ng myanmar | 14 | |
6251062656 | militar | uri ng lipunan sa myanmar | 15 | |
6251062657 | sinakop nh mongol ang pagan | pano bumagsak ang myanmar? | 16 | |
6251062658 | myitsone dam at ananda temple | mga ambag ng myanmar? | 17 |
Flashcards
Flashcards
AP World History Strayer Chapter 3 Vocabulary Flashcards
7247368000 | Persian Empire | *Definition:* Major empire that expanded over "world" and was the largest, most impressive empire of its time. *Significance:* The largest empire of its time. Assimilated the conquered and allowed freedom of religion. Centralized government that unified everyone. | ![]() | 0 |
7247368001 | Athenian Democracy | *Definition:* Direct democracy (limited to wealthy men) instead of representative. *Significance:* First sound democracy that allowed voting collectively on any matters. Moved away from norm and allowed the future civilizations to build off this idea. | ![]() | 1 |
7247368002 | Greco-Persian Wars | *Definition:* Ionian greeks revolted against Persia and Persia declared war on all Greeks. Greeks unified to fight back. *Significance:* Since Persians lost, Greeks gained confidence. Won "freedom" in the voting, citizenship of lowerclassmen. West and East divide viewpoint began. Philosophy spread. Civil war from too much pride. | ![]() | 2 |
7247368003 | Hellenistic Era | *Definition:* Alexander the Great's expansion of the Greek World. *Significance:* Advancement in science, math, language. Spread of culture and mixing of cultures. Greeks dominate and their ways spread. | ![]() | 3 |
7247368004 | Alexander the Great | *Definition:* King of Macedonia, conquered Persian Empire, founded many Greek settlements. *Significance:* Spread Greek culture in ethnic mixing. Encouraged assimilations and advancement in science and new ways of thinking. | ![]() | 4 |
7247368005 | Augustus | *Definition:* First emperor of the Roman Empire (Octavian). *Significance:* Maintained senate and people's opinion. Rules as "First man" and for the "power of the Roman people". Kept peace during transition of Republic to Empire. | ![]() | 5 |
7247368006 | Pax Romana | *Definition:* "Roman Peace". The stability and prosperity of early Roman Empire. *Significance:* Imperial Rome's greatest extent and authority. "Perfect" era of Rome. Things got done and advancements happened! | ![]() | 6 |
7247368007 | Qin Shihuangdi | *Definition:* "The 1st Emperor from Qin". Forcibly reunited China and established a strong and repressive state. *Significance:* Regrouping of China to an Empire. 10 years = success. Political success and military success and increase in population. | ![]() | 7 |
7247368008 | Trung Trac | *Definition:* Vietnamese nationalist and hero. *Significance:* Raised an Army that drove out Chinese for a short period of time. REVOLUTIONARY! avenged country, Hung lineage, and husband. | ![]() | 8 |
7247368009 | Han Dynasty | *Definition:* Centralized government focused on Confucianism and education. *Significance:* The "Golden Age of China". Advanced morals, laws, and education of everyone. Civil Service system, work/jobs/government based on merit of the people. Not on social class. | ![]() | 9 |
7247368010 | Mauryan Empire | *Definition:* The first state to unify most of India (1st Empire). *Significance:* Unified India, had large military, and impressive political system. The closest "great empire" like Romans and Chinese as they got. Sought to govern with Religious values and teachings. | ![]() | 10 |
7247368011 | Ashoka | *Definition:* Emperor of Mauryan India. *Significance:* Conversion to Buddhism. Governance to be enlightened leader. Sought to govern in accord with religious values and moral teachings. | ![]() | 11 |
7247394043 | Kushan Empire | *Definition:* A syncretic empire, formed by Yuezhi, in the Bactrian territories in the early 1st century. *Significance:* Allowed for the great flowering of trans-Eurasian mercantile and cultural exchange along the silk road. Reached into northwest India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan it was a remarkably cosmopolitan place illustrating the mixing and blending of many cultural traditions. | 12 |
Flashcards
AP English Language and Composition Flashcards
8543443856 | ad hominem | Latin for "to the man" this fallacy refers to the specific diversionary tactic of switching the argument from the issue at hand to the character of the other speaker. [If you argue that a park in your community should not be renovated because the person supporting it was arrested during a domestic dispute, then you are guilty of using an ad hominem fallacy.] | 0 | |
8543496348 | ad populum | Latin for "to the people," this fallacy occurs when evidence used to defend an argument boils down to "everybody's doing it, so it must be a good thing to do." [If you argument that people should vote for Rachel Johnson because she has a strong lead in the polls, then you are guilty of using an ad populum fallacy. | 1 | |
8543523597 | anecdote | a brief story used to illustrate a point or claim | 2 | |
8543529733 | claim of fact | asserts that something is true or not true | 3 | |
8543538853 | claim of policy | proposes a change | 4 | |
8543546371 | claim of value | argues that something is good or bad, right or wrong | 5 | |
8543553640 | concession | an acknowledgment that an opposing argument may be true or reasonable | 6 | |
8543563373 | deduction | a logical process wherein you reach a conclusion by starting with a general principle or universal truth - a major permise - and applying it to a specific case - a [MINOR PREMISE = Yoga is a type of exercise. CONCLUSION = Yoga contributes to better heath] | 7 | |
8543624100 | induction | From the Latin inducere, "to lead into," induction is a logical process wherein you reason from particulars to universals, using specific cases in order to draw a conclusion, which is also called a generalization [Regular exercise promotes weight loss. Exercise lowers stress levels .Exercise improves mood and outlook.GENERALIZATION: Exercise contributes to better health.] | 8 | |
8543720333 | inversion | inverted order of words in a sentence [deviation from the subject-verb-object order] | 9 | |
8543736474 | irony, dramatic | tension created by the contrast between what a character says or think and what the audience or readers know to be true [As a result of this technique, some words and actions in a story or play take on a different meaning for the reader than they do for the characters] | 10 | |
8543767439 | irony, situational | a discrepancy between what is expected and what actually happens | 11 | |
8543773645 | irony, verbal | a figure of speech that occurs when a speaker or character says one thing but means something else or when what is said is the opposite of what is expected, creating a noticeable incongruity. | 12 | |
8543793426 | metonymy | figure of speech in which something is represented by another thing that is related to it or emblematic of it [The pen is mightier than the sword.] | 13 | |
8543815097 | mood | the feeling or atmosphere created by a text | 14 | |
8543820807 | qualitative evidence | evidence supported by reason, tradition, or precedent | 15 | |
8543843110 | quantitative evidence | evidence includes things that can be measured, cited, counted, or otherwise represented in number [ for instance, statistics, surveys, polls, and census information] | 16 | |
8543864223 | refutation | a denial of the validity of all or part of an opposing argument | 17 | |
8543872603 | satire | the use of irony or sarcasm as a means of critique, usually of a society or a n individual | 18 | |
8543893718 | synecdoche | figure of speech that uses a part to represent the whole [Because my bank account is running low this month, I have no choice but to start relying on my plastic .] | 19 | |
8543916181 | tone | a speaker's attitude toward the subject as conveyed by the speaker's stylistic and rhetorical choices. | 20 |
AP Language and Composition - Language List #2 Flashcards
7286371727 | Antithesis | Contrasting ideas through juxtaposition, in a parallel structure | 0 | |
7286371728 | Syntax | The way an author chooses to join words into phrases, clauses, and sentences. | 1 | |
7286371729 | Prose | Fiction and nonfiction including all of its forms | 2 | |
7286371730 | Jargon | vocabulary distinctive to a particular group of people | 3 | |
7286371731 | Colloquialism | the use of informal words, phrases or even slang in a piece of writing. | 4 | |
7286371732 | Register | One of the varieties of language appropriate to particular social situation | 5 | |
7286371733 | Diction | refers to an author's word choice | 6 | |
7286371734 | Mode | The method or form of a literary work | 7 | |
7286371735 | Undertone | an attitude that may lie under the ostensible tone of the piece | 8 | |
7286371736 | Anecdote | Short narrative detailing particulars of an interesting event | 9 | |
7286371737 | Wit | intellectually amusing language that surprises and delights | 10 | |
7286371738 | Explication | The art of interpreting or discovering the meaning of a text | 11 | |
7286371739 | Homily | Sermon; serious talk, speech or lecture | 12 | |
7286371740 | Etymology | The study of word origins | 13 | |
7286371741 | Equivocate | speak ambiguously; avoid telling the truth | 14 | |
7286371742 | Poignant | Deeply moving, emotional | 15 | |
7286371743 | Castigate | Scold strongly | 16 | |
7286371744 | Didactic | Intended to teach | 17 | |
7286371745 | Ubiquitous | Found everywhere | 18 | |
7286371746 | Ostentatious | Showy | 19 |
AP Flashcards
4392694735 | Martin Luther | 0 | ||
4392741263 | Lutheranism | 1 | ||
4392744261 | Counter Reformation | 2 | ||
4392741264 | Protestant Reformation | 3 | ||
4392697279 | John Calvin | 4 | ||
4392697280 | Edict of Nantes | 5 | ||
4392697281 | Charles V | 6 | ||
4392699350 | Philip II | 7 | ||
4392886978 | Spanish Armada | 8 | ||
4393082601 | War of Three Henrys | 9 | ||
4392723397 | Mary Tudor | 10 | ||
4392699351 | Queen Elizabeth | 11 | ||
4392701292 | Henry VIII | 12 | ||
4392708481 | Jesuits | 13 | ||
4392712172 | Ignatius Loyola | 14 | ||
4392727364 | Hugenoets | 15 | ||
4392735558 | German Peasant Revolt | 16 | ||
4392737201 | Peace of Augsburg | 17 | ||
4392773481 | Thirty Year's War | 18 | ||
4392961024 | Peace of Westphalia | 19 | ||
4392759958 | Prince Henry the Navigator | (1394-1460) Portuguese prince who established an observatory and school of navigation at Sagres and directed voyages down the west coast of Africa that spurred the growth of Portugal's colonial empire. | 20 | |
4392789030 | Christopher Columbus | An Italian navigator who was funded by the Spanish Government to find a passage to the Far East. He is given credit for discovering the "New World," even though at his death he believed he had made it to India. He made four voyages to the "New World." The first sighting of land was on October 12, 1492, and three other journeys until the time of his death in 1503. | 21 | |
4392791311 | Columbian Exchange | The transfer of goods, crops, and diseases between New and Old World societies after 1492. | 22 | |
4392799625 | Ferdinand and Isabella | Parents of Catherine of Aragon. During the late 15th century, they became King and Queen of a united Spain after centuries of Islamic domination. Together, they made Spain a strong Christian nation and also provided funding to overseas exploration, notably Christopher Columbus. | 23 | |
4392804656 | Vasco da Gamas | Sailed to India and defeated the Arab fleets with cannons, sparking the spice trade. | 24 | |
4392804657 | Amerigo Vespucci | AD Italian explorer and navigator who, upon exploring the American mainland and the South American coast, concluded that Columbus' discovery was actually a new world. It was named "America" in his honor. | 25 | |
4392807088 | Ferdinand Magellan | 26 | ||
4392810578 | Hernando Cortes | 27 | ||
4392814723 | Francisco Pazzaro | 28 | ||
4392836193 | Atlantic Slave Trade | 29 | ||
4392848949 | William Shakespeare | 30 | ||
4392848950 | Micheal de Montaigne | 31 | ||
4392869553 | The Scientific Revolution | 32 | ||
4392892726 | The Enlightenment | 33 | ||
4393052021 | Tycho Brahe | 34 | ||
4393054819 | Johannes Kepler | 35 | ||
4393057333 | Galileo Galilei | 36 | ||
4393057334 | Sir Isaac Newton | 37 | ||
4393059427 | Francis Bacon | 38 | ||
4393059428 | René Descartes | 39 | ||
4396427179 | Salon | 40 | ||
4392903513 | John Locke | 41 | ||
4392911604 | Montesquieu | 42 | ||
4392911605 | Voltaire | 43 | ||
4392914499 | David Hume | 44 | ||
4396432889 | Enlightened absolutism | 45 | ||
4392922993 | War of Austrian Succession | 46 | ||
4392917322 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau | 47 | ||
4392920798 | Seven Years' War | 48 | ||
4392938498 | Cathrine the Great | 49 | ||
4392938499 | Emelian Pugachev | 50 | ||
4392941367 | Joseph II | 51 | ||
4392943348 | Maria Theresa | 52 | ||
4392945433 | Haskalah | 53 | ||
4392946907 | Open-Field System | 54 | ||
4392971620 | Agricultural Revolution | 55 | ||
4392980041 | Putting-out System | 56 | ||
4392982376 | The Industrial Revolution | 57 | ||
4392982377 | Adam Smith | 58 | ||
4392984278 | Urban Guilds | 59 | ||
4392984279 | Economic Liberalism | 60 | ||
4392987751 | Mercantillism | 61 | ||
4393000957 | John Wesley | 62 | ||
4393009237 | The Three Estates | 63 | ||
4393012956 | Louis XIV | 64 | ||
4393009238 | Louis XV | 65 | ||
4393015894 | Estates General | 66 | ||
4393015895 | National Assembly | 67 | ||
4393020463 | Abbe de Sieyes | 68 | ||
4393023009 | Storming of Bastille | 69 | ||
4393027896 | The French Revolution | 70 | ||
4393034054 | Robespierre | 71 | ||
4393031128 | The Reign of Terror | 72 | ||
4393403862 | Mary Wollstonecraft | 73 | ||
4393410201 | The Great Fear | 74 | ||
4393433428 | The Mountain | 75 | ||
4393432163 | Girondists | 76 | ||
4393447419 | The Thermidorian Reaction | 77 | ||
4393452715 | Napoléon Bonaparte | 78 | ||
4393464475 | Napoleonic Code | 79 | ||
4396445479 | Continental System | 80 | ||
4393466694 | Concordat of 1801 | 81 | ||
4393474662 | Congress of Vienna | 82 | ||
4393476672 | Treaty of Paris | 83 | ||
4393478349 | principle of legitimacy | 84 | ||
4393483231 | Holy Alliance | 85 | ||
4393483232 | Tsar Alexander I | 86 | ||
4393485529 | Carlsbad Decrees | 87 | ||
4393485530 | Clemens von Metternich | 88 | ||
4393489420 | Edmund Burke | 89 | ||
4393489434 | Liberalism | 90 | ||
4396451004 | Laissez-faire | 91 | ||
4396451005 | Nationalism | 92 | ||
4396452822 | French Utopian Socialism | 93 | ||
4396452823 | Socialism | 94 | ||
4396456142 | Karl Marx | 95 | ||
4396456143 | Marxism | 96 | ||
4396459763 | The Communist Manifesto | 97 | ||
4396459764 | Romanticism | Intellectual movement begun in reaction to the dominance of Enlightenment Reason. criticized Reason, suggesting that it could not answer all questions. Leading artists and writers included Hegel, Schiller, Schinckel, Keats, Wordsworth, Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley, and Delacroix. | 98 | |
4396463933 | Alexander Ypsilanti | 99 | ||
4396465580 | The Corn Laws | 100 | ||
4396468206 | Glorious Revolution | 101 | ||
4396471471 | Reform Bill of 1832 | 102 | ||
4396471472 | People's Charter | 103 | ||
4396473812 | Ten Hours Act of 1847 | 104 | ||
4396476322 | The Great Famine | 105 | ||
4396478423 | Louis XVIII | 106 | ||
4396478424 | Charles X | 107 | ||
4396515003 | Louis Philippe | 108 | ||
4396518010 | François Guizot | 109 | ||
4396518011 | Louis Blanc | 110 | ||
4396523814 | The June Days | 111 | ||
4396523815 | Frankfurt Assembly | 112 | ||
4396527101 | Edwin Chadwick | 113 | ||
4396529653 | Baron Georges Haussmann | 114 | ||
4396534473 | Labor aristocracy | 115 | ||
4396539013 | Charles Darwin | 116 | ||
4396539014 | Social Darwinism | 117 | ||
4396540400 | Realism | 118 | ||
4396547588 | Napoleon III | 119 | ||
4396550790 | Crimean War | 120 | ||
4396553716 | Giuseppe Mazzini | 121 | ||
4396555470 | Vincenzo Gioberti | 122 | ||
4396559041 | Charles Albert | 123 | ||
4396559042 | Victor Emmanuel | 124 | ||
4396562344 | Cavour | 125 | ||
4396564400 | Giuseppe Garibaldi | 126 | ||
4396573508 | Frederick William | 127 | ||
4396576170 | Count Otto von Bismarck | 128 | ||
4396578858 | Franco-Prussian War | 129 | ||
4396578859 | Alexander II | 130 | ||
4396581099 | Alexander III | 131 | ||
4396589043 | The Russian Revolution of 1905 | 132 | ||
4396589044 | Bloody Sunday | 133 | ||
4396590652 | October Manifesto | 134 | ||
4396594033 | Kulturkampf | 135 | ||
4396594034 | The Dropping of the Pilot | 136 | ||
4396597401 | Paris Commune | 137 | ||
4396597402 | President Adolphe Thiers | 138 | ||
4396600122 | Dreyfus affair | 139 | ||
4396600123 | Émile Zola | 140 | ||
4396602956 | Reform Act of 1832 | 141 | ||
4396602957 | John Stuart Mill | 142 | ||
4396602977 | Second Reform Bill | 143 | ||
4396610533 | Third Reform Bill of 1884 | 144 | ||
4396610534 | People's Budget | 145 | ||
4396612319 | David Lloyd-George | 146 | ||
4396616522 | The First International | 147 | ||
4396616523 | The Second International (1889-1914) | 148 | ||
4396618279 | Revisionism | 149 | ||
4396622582 | Eduard Bernstein | 150 | ||
4396649660 | Opium trade | 151 | ||
4396653424 | Treating of Nanking | 152 | ||
4396654868 | Gunboat Diplomacy | 153 | ||
4396657027 | Great Migration | 154 | ||
4396659344 | New imperialism | 155 | ||
4396659345 | Afrikaners | 156 | ||
4396661290 | Berlin conference | 157 | ||
4396671116 | White man's burden | 158 | ||
4396673567 | Great Rebellion | 159 | ||
4396685681 | Tsar Nicholas II | 160 | ||
4396685695 | February Revolution | 161 | ||
4396689344 | Petrograd Soviet | 162 | ||
4396689345 | Army Order No. 1 | 163 | ||
4396689346 | Lenin | 164 | ||
4396691506 | Bolshevik | 165 | ||
4396645677 | Black Hand | 166 | ||
4396520159 | The June Days | 167 | ||
4396691507 | Tronsky | 168 | ||
4396693681 | Stalin | 169 | ||
4396693682 | Treaty of Brest-Litovsk | 170 | ||
4396697035 | War Communism | 171 | ||
4396697036 | Second Battle of Marne | 172 | ||
4396700703 | World War I | 173 | ||
4396700704 | Kulaks | 174 | ||
4396756169 | Treaty of Versailles | 175 | ||
4396756170 | World War II | 176 | ||
4396759617 | War guilt clause | 177 | ||
4396761908 | Balfour Declaration | 178 | ||
4396779312 | existentialism | 179 | ||
4396779313 | Soren Kierkengaard | 180 | ||
4396779314 | Friedrich Nietzsche | 181 | ||
4396779315 | Planck | 182 | ||
4396779316 | Sigmund Freud | 183 | ||
4396779317 | goedel | 184 | ||
4396779318 | stream of conciousness | 185 | ||
4396779319 | modernism | 186 | ||
4396779320 | functionalism | 187 | ||
4396779321 | Walter Gropius | 188 | ||
4396779322 | Bauhaus | 189 | ||
4396779323 | impressionism | 190 | ||
4396779324 | expressionism | 191 | ||
4396779325 | surrealism | 192 | ||
4396779326 | dadaism | 193 | ||
4396779327 | postimpressionism | 194 | ||
4396779328 | Guernica | 195 | ||
4396779329 | Kaynes | 196 | ||
4396779330 | the Little Entente | 197 | ||
4396779331 | Weinmar Republic | 198 | ||
4396779332 | Bavarian Beer Hall Putsche | 199 | ||
4396779333 | Gustav Stresemann | 200 | ||
4396779334 | Kellogg-Briand Pact | 201 | ||
4396779335 | Great Depression | 202 | ||
4396779336 | Keynes | 203 | ||
4396779337 | fiscal policy | 204 | ||
4396779338 | Popular Front | 205 | ||
4396811404 | Nuremberg Trials | 206 | ||
4396811405 | Teheran | 207 | ||
4396811406 | Yalta | 208 | ||
4396811407 | Pitsdam | 209 | ||
4396811408 | Truman | 210 | ||
4396811409 | Truman Doctrine | 211 | ||
4396811410 | Marshall plan | 212 | ||
4396811411 | Stalin | 213 | ||
4396811412 | Pasternak | 214 | ||
4396811413 | Khruschev | 215 | ||
4396811414 | Dr. Zhivago | 216 | ||
4396811415 | Solzhenitsyn | 217 | ||
4396811416 | Nagy Kadar | 218 | ||
4396811417 | Brezhnev | 219 | ||
4396821497 | Conservative Authoritarianism | 220 | ||
4396821498 | Totalitarianism | 221 | ||
4396821499 | Communism | 222 | ||
4396821500 | Fascism | 223 | ||
4396821501 | Eugenics | 224 | ||
4396821502 | New Economic Policy | 225 | ||
4396821503 | Lenin | 226 | ||
4396821504 | Stalin | 227 | ||
4396821505 | Leon Trotsky | 228 | ||
4396821506 | Five year plan | 229 | ||
4396821507 | Collectivization of agriculture | 230 | ||
4396821508 | Kulaks | 231 | ||
4396821509 | Mussolini | 232 | ||
4396821510 | socialist realism | 233 | ||
4396821511 | great purge | 234 | ||
4396821512 | socialism | Economic ideology, opposed to Capitalism and Laissez Faire, that holds that key industry and the means of production should be centrally controlled by the government, so that workers will not be abused by bourgeoisie factory owners. | 235 | |
4396821513 | black shirts | 236 | ||
4396821514 | Giacomo Matteotti | 237 | ||
4396821515 | Lateran Agreement | 238 | ||
4396821516 | Adolf Hitler | 239 | ||
4396821517 | The Nazi Party | 240 | ||
4396821518 | Heinrich Brüning | 241 | ||
4396821519 | Enabling Act | 242 | ||
4396821520 | Brown Shirts (SA) | 243 | ||
4396821521 | Heinrich Himmler | 244 | ||
4396821522 | SS | 245 | ||
4396821523 | Nuremberg Laws | 246 | ||
4396821524 | Kristallnacht | 247 | ||
4396821525 | Axis | 248 | ||
4396821526 | Guernica | 249 | ||
4396821527 | Anschluss | 250 | ||
4396821528 | Appeasment | 251 | ||
4396821529 | Neville Chamberlain | 252 | ||
4396821530 | Munich Conference | 253 | ||
4396821531 | blitzkrieg | 254 | ||
4396821532 | Holocaust | 255 | ||
4396821533 | New Order | 256 | ||
4396636122 | The Battle of the Somme | 257 | ||
4404707846 | Chartist Movement | Reform movement in Britain of the 1830s and 1840s that demanded progressive political reforms like universal adult male suffrage and the right of working- class people to serve in Parliament. Although it failed at the time, the goals of Chartism were eventually reached. | 258 |
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