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高一年级英语作文:I,have,a,childhood,full,of,memories800字作文

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高一年级英语作文:I,have,a,childhood,full,of,memories800字作文小学作文

精选作文:高一年级英语作文:I,have,a,childhood,full,of,memories800字作文

  My childhood was unforgettable. When I was five years old, I went to the kindergarten every day. I had a lot of good time with my little friends. My parents took good care of me. I didn’t need to care about food and clothes and any other things. I was very happy in those days. But one day, my mother told me that she wouldn't pick me up after school. I was afraid of going home alone, so I started to cry and I was angry with my mother. Although I insisted that she and my father should protect me safely, they still disagreed with me. They thought it was good for me to learn to be independent. The next day after class, I had to take a bus to go back home. I forgot to see the bus route when I got on. Therefore, when the bus was more and more far from my home, I felt anxious. Finally, I got the last stop, and then took the same bus back home. When I told my parents my story, they never thought it is a mistake, on the contrary, they thought it is a useful experience. From then on, I don't let them meet me after school any more.

my childhood英语高分作文

My Childhood

The image of childhood is like a paradise with warm sunshine, pretty

flowers and many peaceful and joyful things in it. Some people compare their childhood as a book with moving stories, some people compare it as a candy with sweet smell, and some people compare it as jail with little freedom. As for me, the childhood was like a movie company with various kinds of movies.

Firstly, my childhood was a comedy full of happiness. At that time, I didn't have any high-tech products like mobile phone, computer or MP3. Insted of them, my toys usually came from the nature, we picked the leaf used them as money, picked the petals used them as decoration, picked the fruits used them as lunch.And around me, there were paper swan, paper plane, paper boat, paper frog and so on. We created a lot of games such as decoration, we used the color pencils to draw pictures on other's faces, made all of us so ugly. We caught the butterflies and broke off their wings which were used as painting

materials.Whenever I recalled my childhood, the feeling was like watching an interesting movie, couldn't help laughing.

Secondly, my childhood was a science fiction full of imagination. As the people say, the kid is kinds of strange species who always do something unbelievable enough. My childhood was full of these inconceivable

memories. In order to dressed myself like the actress called white snake, I took away the white mosquito curtain from chest, cut it into pieces and made them as my headwear.In order to proved that I could cook by myself, I took the potatoes, eggs and rice, also a lighter stolen from my father's pocket, then asked them to gather outside, for making fire, I stolen the straw which used to cover the new-born rice seeding and finally made a big trouble. So whenever I recalled my childhood, there were so many fantastic ideas which were full of strange imagination.

Thirdly, my childhood was an adventure full of challenges. There were so much "first ", the first time I had been a sister to look after my younger sister, the first time I had been a student to learn how to write and read, the first time I had been a singer to act on Children'

Day. . . I had difficulty in riding the bike, washing clothes and fighting against the bad boys, I wasn't willing to sleep alone, to walk on night, to go to school in the morning. There were so many challenges and difficulties, but I was brave enough to overcome them, so my adventure of childhood was wonderful.

Moreover, my childhood was a thriller full of pity. I missed the funeral ceremony of my grandmother who looked after me very well. I put more

attention on playing so that I couldn't catch up with other students, I gave up the plan to learn FreeSong Koto so that I didn't have any talent and skill . And sometimes I fought against my sister, my close friends, I argued with my parents, my teacher.When I recall my childhood, it's inevitable to feel sorry.

In a word, the childhood was a series of movies with different types

different time and different actors. I enjoyed watching them again and again, if it is possible, I would like to act it once more!

My Childhood memory 童年回忆英语作文

Comprehensive English(Term 1, 2013)

Instructor: Suzie Zhang

Class: Translation D

Name:Angel 武丹蕾

Date due:2013.10.24

My childhood memories ----An adventure of me

In childhood memories ,the most heartbreaking thing for me is being torn away from homes by parents for punishment.

Therefore,never can I forget that night, when my father left me after dinning out, saying that he will go to the barber’s and I should go back home on my own. “That’s great!” I answered quickly but chopped back and ran the other way the moment when my dad gone. Like a bird with wings , I enter every shops that appealed to me, touching and playing here and there, until a bad-tempered staff showed up. No sooner had I been kicked out by her, than I suddenly realized that I could not find my way to home!

“Will witch take me away and force me to be her slave?” Thinking of that, I could do nothing but burst into tears helplessly and hopelessly. Time elapsed and I was somehow brought into a warm and cosy home, where dolls, TV remote control and cakes were given to me by a kind couple.

However, a familiar voice broke in. “Where have you been to? You rouge!” It’s my dad, wearing an expression of worry. Obviously he became irritated because my misbehavior almost drove my parents crazy and gave rise to numerous trouble.

Thanks to god, the couple, who save me from being kidnapped is happen to be colleagues of my father’s!!

扬中树人2012-2013-2高一年级英语作业纸 2013-4-15

扬中树人2012-2013-2高一年级英语作业纸 2013-4-15

命题:纪开梅 校对:徐兆进 完成时间:30分钟 成绩:

(A) The producer of a new Indonesian movie about President Obama’s childhood years in Jakarta(雅加达) is hoping that interested Americans will flock to see the film, Little Obama, in theatres across the country.

Little Obama is the creation of Damien Dematra, an Indonesian writer and artist who has worked on the project since November when he was struck with the idea of writing about the time a young Obama lived in Jakarta with his mother and stepfather in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The film is based on a novel published in March Obama Anak Menteng, and focuses on the president’s childhood friendships in Indonesia.

The novel and the film are fictionalized(把-编成小说) accounts of the president’s time in Jakarta and are based on interviews with people who are childhood friends and neighbours of Mr. Obama. Many Indonesians share a deep pride about a man who spent part of his shaping years in the country and went on to become U.S. president.

The film star is a 14-year-old Hasan Faruq Ali, an American who has lived in Indonesia with his family for about 10 years. Like the president, he is the son of a white mother and a black father. Since filming began, he has been under the shine of media attention. “My whole life changed overnight,” he says.

The film, which was made on a budget of $1 million, won’t get its first public screening until Wednesday, but ads for the movie on YouTube have got a few thousand hits. It isn’t clear whether Little Obama will get a U.S. release(发行), but the film’s producer says he is in talks with a U.S. distributor(发行人).

61. What is the film Damien Dematra produced mainly about?

A. The friendship between America and Indonesia.

B. The political views of Obama from his childhood.

C. The determination and hard work of young Obama.

D. Mr. Obama’s friends when he was young in Indonesia.

62. Which is NOT true about Obama and Hasan Faruq Ali?

A. Their nationality is American.

B. They shoot a film when they are young.

C. they have the experience of living in Indonesia.

D. Hasan has a white mother and a black father.

63. What can we learn from the last paragraph?

A. The future of Little Obama is unknown.

B. Little Obama will be popular in America.

C. Little Obama will be popular in Indonesia.

D. Ads for Little Obama proved unsuccessful.

(B)

Christmas came in extravagant(奢侈的) fashion to the Muslim desert emirate(酋长国) of Abu Dhabi as a shining hotel uncovered a bejeweled(?a href="http://www.zw2.cn/zhuanti/guanyuwozuowen/" target="_blank" class="keylink">我灾楸Φ? Christmas tree valued at more than 11 million dollars on Wednesday.

It is “the most expensive Christmas tree ever” with “a value of over 11 million dollars”, said Hans Olbertz, general of Emirates Palace Hotel, at its inauguratuion(落成典礼).

The 13-metre (40-foot) evergreen, located in the gold hall of the hotel, is decorated with silver and gold bows, ball-shaped decorations and small white lights. But the necklaces, earrings and other jewellery hung around the tree’s branches are what give it a record value. “It holds a total of 181 diamonds, pearls, sapphires and other precious stones,” said Khalifa Khouri, owner of Style Gallery, which provided the jewellery.

“The tree itself is about 10,000 dollars,” Olbertz said. “The jewellery has a value of over 11 million dollars—I think $1,141,150.” “This will probably be an entry into the Guinness book of world records,” Olbertz said, adding that Emirates Palace planned to

contact the organization about the tree which is to stay until the end of the year.

Asked whether the tree might be against religious sensibilities in the United Arab Emirates, where the vast majority of the local population are Muslim, Olbertz said he did not think it would. “It is a liberal(自由的) country,” he said.

The hotel has had a Christmas tree up in previous years, but this year “we have to do something different”, and the hotel’s 64. Why is the Christmas tree said to be “the most expensive Christmas tree ever”?

A. Because the cost pf planting and decorating the tree is too high.

B. Because the tree itself has a value of more than 11 million dollars

C. Because the tree has unique religious sensibility in the United Arab Emirates.

D. Because the jewellery hung around the tree’s branches gives it a record value.

65. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?

A. The tree is located in the gold leaf-bedecked hall of the king’s palace.

B. The tree is decorated with jewellery whose value is over 11 million dollars.

C. The tree has been an entry into the Guinness book of world records.

D. The tree is sure to be against religious sensibilities in the United Arab Emirates.

66. The underlined word “” in the last paragraph probably means “___”.

A. worked out B. turned out C. looked out D. broke out

67. Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?

A. Christmas coming in extravagant fashion

B. The precious jewellery hung around a tree

C. The most expensive Christmas tree ever D. the United Arab Emirates, a liberal country

(C)

Considered one of Europe’s two “bicycle capitals” along with Amsterdam, Copenhagen(哥本哈根) counts more bicycles than people and cycling is so popular that its numerous bike paths can become crowded. Two-wheeler traffic jams are especially regular on the main Noerrebrogade road used by around 36,000 cyclists a day. “You have to elbow your way in to go forward and some cyclists aren’t always thoughtful,” complains 22-year-old university student Lea Bresell.

The creation of bike highways “comes right on time”, says Danish Cyclist Federation Spokesman Frits Bredal. “Copenhagen’s roads are overloaded with people who want to ride their bicycles in all kinds of weather,” he says. “If in the 1960s Danes viewed the car as the symbol of freedom, the bicycles have supposed that role today,” Bredal says. “It’s a classes, even politicians ride bikes,” he says.

It is on crowded Noerrebrogade—the busiest bicycle street in Europe, according to the cyclist association—that city planners have decided to build the first of Copenhagen’s environmentally friendly roads. The jammed bike paths will be widened up to four metres on either side of the road, which itself will be reserved for bikes only. The idea is to make Noerrebrogade “Europe’s great cycling street”, says Andreas Roehl, Copenhagen government’s bicycle program manager who is also known as “Mr. Bike”.

But Roehl is not content with making life easier for Copenhagen’s inner-city cyclists: He wants to get suburbanites(郊区居民) out of their cars and onto two wheels as well. His goal is to hike the percentage of suburban commuters cycling to and from the city from the 37 percent it is today to 50 percent by 2015.

68. Why does Copenhagen plan to build the first bike highway?

A. Because bike highways are environmentally friendly.

B. Because it’s a part of the city’s development program.

C. Because the inner-city commuters urge that it should be built.

D. Because too many bicycles cause the paths to be crowded.

69. Why do people in Copenhagen want to ride their bicycles in all kinds of weather?

A. Because the price of petrol has been going up all the time.

B. Because the bicycle is viewed as the symbol of freedom nowadays.

C. Because it’s hard for people to find parking space in crowded streets.

D. Because politicians ride bikes and commuters enjoy following them.

70. The underline word “second paragraph probably means?

A. fashion B. Improvement C. reform D. law

71. Which of the following is NOT included in Andreas Roehl’s plan?

A. The former jammed bike paths will be widened.

B. Noerrebrogade is to be made “Europe’s great cycling street”.

C. All commuters will be pushed to leave their cars at home.

D. More suburbanites will be got out of their cars and onto two wheels.

(D)

What should I do with the diary I’ve kept for 50 years?

I’ve been keeping a journal since I was 16 and I’m now 65. I have more than 80 notebooks in a big box. I don’t want my children embarrassed by when I die. But I can’t bring myself, yet, to burn the case. My journals are still part of me. Might my grandchildren, with a bit more distance, be interested? Or is there some way I could turn them into something creative? I’m thinking about art instead of a book. 5 March 2012, 11:22 p.m.

Please don’t burn them! What a wonderful source of memories for you—or if you feel you’d rather not keep them, possibly what a wonderful resource for others! Why not contact something like the Mass Observation Project at the University of Sussex? Then they will remain as a record of everyday life throughout your lifetime, and if your grandchildren are interested they’ll know where to find them. 6 March 2012, 8:30 a.m.

Please don’t burn them! If possible, transcribe(转录) them, or have them transcribed, into a computer medium before your words are lost because the paper has decayed. I recently had an opportunity to read a similar diary of the WWⅡ record of an ordinary soldier. It was attractive in the way it differed from the official record. I suppose to some degree it all depends on what you have recorded, but many social historians and similar people would find such a complete personal record of a life led during the second half of the 20th century to be very valuable.

Please don’t stop writing now just because you are 65!

72. What does the underlined word “” refer to about the journal owner?

A. His children and grandchildren. B. The best responses to his problem.

C. His more than 80 diary books. D. The changes from 18 to 65.

73. What does the journal owner probably hope to happen to his journals?

A. His children will put them together with him after his death.

B. His grandchildren will continue to write following his habit.

C. They can be published by famous publishing houses.

D. They can be filmed or changed into a TV play.

74. What does “nal?

A. They provide good memories for others especially his grandchildren.

B. They will educate the young to remember the hard life.

C. They will help his grandchildren earn more money.

D. They will make others learn more about the war.

75. “” mentions an ordinary soldier’s war record in his words to ___.

A. remind the owner to write more about the war

B. tell him social historians may be interested in his notebooks

C. encourage him to write journals like determined soldiers

D. show the owner his notebooks will benefit some people

61-63: DBA 64-67: DBAC 68-71: DBAC 72-75: CDAD

2013级高一暑假英语网络作业三

2013级高一暑假英语网络作业三

A

Charlotte Hollins faces a battle. The 23-year-old British farmer and her 21-year-old brother Ben are fighting to save a farm that their father worked on since he was 14. Although confident they will succeed, she is aware of farming?s many challenges.

“You don?t often get a day off. Supermarkets put a lot of pressure on farmers to keep prices low. With fewer people working on farms it can be isolating,” she said. “There is a high rate of suicide and farming will never make you rich!”

Like others around the world, Charlotte?s generation tend to leave the farm for cities.

Oliver Robinson, 25, grew up in Yorkshire. But he never considered staying on his father and grandfather?s land. “I?m sure Dad hoped I?d stay,” he said. “I guess it?s a nice, straightforward life, but it doesn?t appeal to me. For young, ambitious people, farm life is hard.”

For Robinson, farming doesn?t offer much “in terms of money or lifestyle”. Hollins agrees that economic factors stop people from enjoying the rewards of farming. He describes it as a career that provides “for a vital human need”, allowing people to work “outdoors with nature”.

Farming is a big political issue in the UK. The “Buy British” campaigns urge consumers not to purchase cheaper imported foods. The 2001 foot and mouth crisis closed thousands of farms, stopped meat exports, and raised public consciousness about the troubles on UK farms.

Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver?s 2005 campaign to get children eating healthily also highlighted the issue.

This national concern gives hope to farmers competing with powerful supermarkets. While most people buy food from the big supermarkets, hundreds of independent Farmers? Markets are becoming popular.

“I started going to Farmers? Markets in direct defiance of the big supermarkets. I seriously objected to the super-sizing of everything – what exactly DO they put on our apples to make them so big and red? It?s terrible,” said Londoner Michaela Samson, 31.

1. What are the challenges that British farmers face according to Charlotte Hollins?

a. loneliness b. thin profits

c. a lack of good equipment d. long working hours but slow results

A. abc B. abd C. acd D. bcd

2. Why did Oliver Robinson refuse to stay on the farm?

A. He hoped for a simpler life.

B. He was fed up with a hard farm life.

C. Farm life was too demanding though he liked it.

D. He hoped for something challenging and rewarding.

3. Which of the following is an advantage of Farmers? Markets?

A. Lower prices. B. Flexible sizes.

C. Convenient location. D. Healthier food.

4. What can we conclude from the last two paragraphs?

A. Things are improving for independent farms in the UK.

B. Farming in the UK can now match the powerful supermarkets.

C. Most British people are doubtful of food in big supermarkets.

D. Most British people have realized the problems facing farms and begun to help save them.

B

If you are looking for a creative solution to a piece of work or a school assignment, don?t lock yourself up in a quiet room.

A new study suggests that moderate background noise is a better spur (动力) to creative thinking than the sound of silence, Time magazine reported.

A paper published in the Journal of Consumer Research says that the perfect working environment should buzz (嗡嗡作响) with a little noise.

Researchers found that test subjects were at their most creative when background noise was measured at 70 decibels, the level one might find in a busy coffee shop.

A nearly silent environment (50 decibels) was too quiet. Turning up the volume to 85 decibels (a jackhammer tearing up the pavement outside your building) was counterproductive – the noise became a distraction.

The researchers asked 65 students at the University of British Columbia, Canada, to perform various creative tasks while noises recorded at a roadside restaurant were played in the background.

In one experiment, scientists asked participants to brainstorm ideas for a new type of mattress (气垫). Test subjects had the most successful discussions when the noise in the background was noticeable but not too loud.

While a quiet environment may make it easier to read a book, the authors of the study say that moderate background noise creates just enough of a distraction to force people to think more imaginatively, without breaking their focus so completely that they can?t think at all.

Should we all head for Starbucks to get creative? Not necessarily.

Researchers found limited work time surrounded by the low-level noise of a coffeehouse is what really stimulates creativity.

Equally, working in a cafe environment isn?t good for everybody. The productivity boost was most obvious among those who were naturally creative to begin with.

5. The recommended level of background noise is ______.

A. 50 decibels B. 65 decibels C. 70 decibels D. 85 decibels

6. Why is moderate background noise good for creativity?

A. It relaxes people and stops them from getting bored.

B. It can help people to focus on a subject.

C. It can absorb sudden noises that cause distraction.

D. It pushes people to use their imagination but doesn?t reach a level that disturbs them.

7. According to the last three paragraphs, ______.

A. the low-level noise of a coffeehouse may be too loud for some people to work with

B. if a person is not a creative type, then background noise may not be of so much help to them

C. a person?s own creative ability is as important as the environment they are in

D. working in a coffeehouse is effective for most people

8. Which best describes the writer?s tone in the passage?

A. Negative. B. Objective. C. Enthusiastic. D. Doubtful.

C

I looked at my beautiful Christmas tree and sighed. It was time. The New Year was a week old and my tree still stood in the corner of our room with its collection of memories proudly displayed in a shower of colorful lights. I?d procrastinated long enough.

I got up, went to the garage and dragged all the boxes into the room. The garland (花环) was the first to come down. The tree looked naked (光秃秃的) already. I took the large ornaments off next. They made a large pile on our bed. An hour later, our bed was covered with Christmas memories. Each pile contained an ornament along with its matching brothers and sisters from sets purchased many years ago.

I prepared the boxes and carefully placed ornaments in their protective packaging, pausing every few minutes to admire a favorite. “Hey, little Santa!” I held the Santa from my childhood. “Thanks for being my friend for almost fifty years.” He was a little ragged (衣着破烂的) but still gives me a flood of wonderful memories. “Until next year, my dear friend.”

There was a collection of handmade ones. My children made in their first years of school, more than twenty years ago. Made by tiny hands, they are far from perfect in design, but every year they go on my memory tree – memories of young giggles (咯咯地笑) on Christmas morning and a smiling face when they handed them to me when I came home from work. “Look what we made, Daddy!”

“Oh! It is beautiful. Let?s find a special spot on the tree for it.” Every year since, they are displayed.

A few hours after I started, the filled boxes were back in the garage, the room was vacuumed (用吸尘器清扫) and I sat staring at a barren (空荡荡的) corner. The room seemed so empty. It took me two days of work to assemble (收集) and decorate my tree, but only a few hours to take it apart.

My tree is a good marriage or a great friendship. Like the tree, they take a long time to assemble and decorate with memories, but can be torn down quickly.

Every year I have to put my tree away, but not my marriage or friendships. I take great care of those. They get to glow in the corner of my life for as long as I live. I get to analyze my tree and find memories for a few weeks every year. I can do the same with the loves in my life every day. Take great care of your friendships and your marriage. Once they come down, they aren?t as easy to put back together as a Christmas tree. Stand them in that special spot in the corner of your heart and admire their glow.

9. In the author?s eyes, the Christmas tree _____.

A. is a collection of childhood memories B. is a symbol of long-lasting relations

C. takes too much time to decorate D. is full of out-of-date ornaments

10. The underlined word “procrastinated” probably means ______.

A. reflected B. celebrated C. decorated D. delayed

11. To the author, a Christmas tree is similar to a good marriage in that ______.

A. both take time to build but fall apart easily

B. both remind him of bittersweet memories

C. both need to be admired for some time

D. both get less attractive over the years

12. What is the main theme of the article?

A. We?d better put away Christmas decorations and recycle them each year.

B. Friendships and marriages should be valued and managed carefully.

C. Memories with friends and family should be cherished and relived.

D. We should decorate Christmas trees with personal stuff and recycle.

D

In the 1990s, the term “digital divide” described the technology haves and have-nots.

Nowadays the divide has grown smaller, but left a troubling side effect.

Studies show children in poorer families spend more time than those from better-off families watching TV, playing video games and on social networking sites.

“I?m not anti technology at home, but it?s not a savior (救星),” said Laura Robell, principal at Elmhurst Community Prep, a middle school in the lower-income area of East Oakland, California. “So often we have parents come up to us and say, ?I have no idea how to monitor Facebook.?”

The Federal Communications Commission plans to spend $200 million on digital literacy corps, involving perhaps thousands of teachers of productive computing in schools and libraries. Some private and state projects already exist.

A study published in 2010 by the Kaiser Family Foundation, which studies health policy in the US, found that children of parents without college degrees spent 90 minutes more per day exposed to media than children from higher socioeconomic families.

Children of parents without a college degree spent 11.5 hours each day exposed to media, an increase of 4 hours and 40 minutes per day since 1999.

Even children of more educated parents tended to use their devices for entertainment – 10 hours of multimedia a day, a 3.5-hour jump from 1999.

“Despite the educational potential of computers, the reality is that their use for education or meaningful content creation is tiny compared to their use for pure entertainment,” said Vicky Rideout, author of the study. “Instead of closing the achievement gap, they?re widening the time-wasting gap (差距).”

In 12-year-old Markiy Cook?s family, money is limited, but there are two laptops, an Xbox 360 and a Nintendo Wii. Markiy has his own phone. He likes Facebook, texting and games.

“I stay up all night, until like 7 in the morning,” he laughs, slightly embarrassed. “It?s why I?m so tired on Monday.” His grades are suffering with a D average. He wants to be a biologist when he grows up.

Alejandro Zamora, 13, an eighth grader, calls himself “a Facebook freak”. His mother, Olivia Montesdeoca, said she could not get him to use the computer for homework.

She added that she did not understand the Internet. “I have no idea about YouTube. I?ve never even heard of a webcam.”

13. According to the text, Laura Robell is concerned that ______.

A. a lot of parents don?t care about monitoring their children?s behavior online

B. the US government do not make enough effort to introduce technology in education

C. many school children aren?t using technology properly at home

D. a lot of parents do not know enough about technology

14. We can learn from the text that children from more educated families ______.

A. spend less time using their devices purely for entertainment purposes

B. spend fewer hours on the Internet than they used to

C. would rather visit social networking sites than play video games

D. achieve more than children of parents who have had a worse education

15. What problem do Markiy Cook and Alejandro Zamora have?

A. They are both addicted to video games

B. They both perform badly at school

C. Neither of them use multimedia mainly for education

D. Neither of them have parents who know a lot about technology

16. What is the text mainly about?

A. The educational potential of digital devices.

B. The troubles caused by a narrowing digital divide.

C. American students? dependence on multi-media.

D. The problems faced by lower income American families.

E

Tips for a Successful College Visit

College visits are important. Before you commit years of your life and thousands of dollars to a school, you need to make sure you?re choosing a place that matches your personality and interests. You can?t get the “feel” of a school from a guidebook, so be sure to visit the campus. Below are a few tips for getting the most out of your college visit.

1. Explore on your own

Of course you should take the official campus tour, but allow time to walk around on your own. Tour guides will show you a school?s selling points, but the oldest and prettiest buildings aren?t the whole picture of a college, nor is the one dorm room that has been cleaned to perfection for visitors. Try to walk the extra mile and get the complete picture of the campus.

2. Read the bulletin boards

When you visit the student center, academic buildings and residence halls, take a few minutes to read the bulletin

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