advert | (noun) a public promotion of some product or service | Synonyms: ad, advertisement, advertising, advertizement, advertizing |
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(verb) make a more or less disguised reference to | Synonyms: allude, touch |
(verb) make reference to | Synonyms: bring up, cite, mention, name, refer |
(verb) give heed (to) | Synonyms: attend, give ear, hang, pay heed |
advertence | (noun) the process of being heedful | Synonyms: advertency |
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advertency | (noun) the process of being heedful | Synonyms: advertence |
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advertent | (adjective) giving attention | Synonyms: heedful |
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advertently | (adverb) in a careful deliberate manner | Synonyms: heedfully, mindfully |
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advertise | (verb) make publicity for; try to sell (a product) | Synonyms: advertize, promote, push |
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(verb) call attention to | Synonyms: advertize, publicise, publicize |
advertised | (adjective) called to public attention | - |
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advertisement | (noun) a public promotion of some product or service | Synonyms: ad, advert, advertising, advertizement, advertizing |
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advertiser | (noun) someone whose business is advertising | Synonyms: adman, advertizer |
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advertising | (noun) the business of drawing public attention to goods and services | Synonyms: merchandising, publicizing |
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(noun) a public promotion of some product or service | Synonyms: ad, advert, advertisement, advertizement, advertizing |
advertize | (verb) make publicity for; try to sell (a product) | Synonyms: advertise, promote, push |
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(verb) call attention to | Synonyms: advertise, publicise, publicize |
advertizement | (noun) a public promotion of some product or service | Synonyms: ad, advert, advertisement, advertising, advertizing |
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advertizer | (noun) someone whose business is advertising | Synonyms: adman, advertiser |
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advertizing | (noun) a public promotion of some product or service | Synonyms: ad, advert, advertisement, advertising, advertizement |
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advertorial | (noun) an advertisement that is written and presented in the style of an editorial or journalistic report | - |
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animadvert | (verb) express one's opinion openly and without fear or hesitation | Synonyms: opine, sound off, speak out, speak up |
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(verb) express blame or censure or make a harshly critical remark | - |
avert | (verb) turn away or aside | Synonyms: turn away |
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(verb) prevent the occurrence of; prevent from happening; to protect from or to keep away anything undesirable; to ward off | Synonyms: avoid, debar, deflect, fend off, forefend, forfend, head off, obviate, stave off, ward off |
avertable | (adjective) capable of being avoided or warded off | Synonyms: avertible, avoidable, evitable |
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avertible | (adjective) capable of being avoided or warded off | Synonyms: avertable, avoidable, evitable |
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averting | (noun) the act of preventing something from occurring | - |
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(noun) the act of turning yourself (or your gaze) away | Synonyms: aversion |
controvert | (verb) prove to be false or incorrect | Synonyms: rebut, refute |
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(verb) be resistant to | Synonyms: contradict, oppose |
convert | (noun) a person who has been converted to another religious or political belief | - |
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(verb) change from one system to another or to a new plan or policy | Synonyms: change over |
(verb) change religious beliefs, or adopt a religious belief | - |
(verb) exchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category | Synonyms: change, commute, exchange |
(verb) change the nature, purpose, or function of something | - |
(verb) change in nature, purpose, or function; undergo a chemical change | - |
(verb) cause to adopt a new or different faith | - |
(verb) exchange a penalty for a less severe one | Synonyms: commute, exchange |
(verb) make (someone) agree, understand, or realize the truth or validity of something | Synonyms: convince, win over |
(verb) score an extra point or points after touchdown by kicking the ball through the uprights or advancing the ball into the end zone | - |
convertase | (noun) any of several enzymes that convert a compound into smaller, biologically-active compounds. | - |
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converter | (noun) a device for changing one substance or form or state into another | Synonyms: convertor |
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convertibility | (noun) the quality of being exchangeable (especially the ability to convert a currency into gold or other currencies without restriction) | - |
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convertible | (adjective) capable of being exchanged for or replaced by something of equal value | Synonyms: exchangeable |
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(adjective) designed to be changed from one use or form to another | - |
(adjective) capable of being changed in substance as if by alchemy | Synonyms: transformable, translatable, transmutable |
(noun) a car that has top that can be folded or removed | - |
(noun) a sofa that can be converted into a bed | Synonyms: sofa bed |
(noun) a corporate security (usually bonds or preferred stock) that can be exchanged for another form of security (usually common stock) | Synonyms: convertible security |
convertor | (noun) a device for changing one substance or form or state into another | Synonyms: converter |
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couverture | (noun) chocolate that contains at least 32 percent cocoa butter | - |
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covert | (adjective) secret or hidden; not openly practiced or engaged in or shown or avowed | - |
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(adjective) (of a wife) being under the protection of her husband | - |
(noun) a covering that serves to conceal or shelter something | Synonyms: concealment, cover, screen |
(noun) a flock of coots | - |
covertly | (adverb) in a covert manner | - |
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covertness | (noun) the state of being covert and hidden | Synonyms: hiddenness |
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culvert | (noun) a transverse and totally enclosed drain under a road or railway | - |
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divert | (verb) turn aside; turn away from | Synonyms: deviate |
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(verb) send on a course or in a direction different from the planned or intended one | - |
(verb) withdraw (money) and move into a different location, often secretly and with dishonest intentions | Synonyms: hive off |
(verb) occupy in an agreeable, entertaining or pleasant fashion | Synonyms: amuse, disport |
diverted | (adjective) pleasantly occupied | Synonyms: amused, entertained |
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diverticulitis | (noun) inflammation of a diverticulum in the digestive tract (especially the colon); characterized by painful abdominal cramping and fever and constipation | - |
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diverticulosis | (noun) presence of multiple diverticula in the walls of the colon | - |
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diverticulum | (noun) a herniation through the muscular wall of a tubular organ (especially the colon) | - |
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divertimento | (noun) a musical composition in several movements; has no fixed form | Synonyms: serenade |
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diverting | (adjective) providing enjoyment; pleasantly entertaining | Synonyms: amusing, amusive |
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divertingly | (adverb) in an entertaining and amusing manner | Synonyms: amusingly |
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evert | (verb) turn inside out; turn the inner surface of outward | - |
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everting | (noun) the act of turning inside out | Synonyms: eversion, inversion |
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extravert | (adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extraverted, extravertive, extrovert, extroverted, extrovertive |
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(noun) (psychology) a person concerned more with practical realities than with inner thoughts and feelings | Synonyms: extrovert |
extraverted | (adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extravert, extravertive, extrovert, extroverted, extrovertive |
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extravertive | (adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extravert, extraverted, extrovert, extroverted, extrovertive |
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extrovert | (adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extravert, extraverted, extravertive, extroverted, extrovertive |
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(noun) (psychology) a person concerned more with practical realities than with inner thoughts and feelings | Synonyms: extravert |
extroverted | (adjective) not introspective; examining what is outside yourself | Synonyms: extrospective |
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(adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extravert, extraverted, extravertive, extrovert, extrovertive |
(adjective) at ease in talking to others | Synonyms: forthcoming, outgoing |
extrovertish | (adjective) being somewhat extroverted | - |
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extrovertive | (adjective) being concerned with the social and physical environment | Synonyms: extravert, extraverted, extravertive, extrovert, extroverted |
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inadvertence | (noun) the trait of forgetting or ignoring your responsibilities | Synonyms: heedlessness, inadvertency, unmindfulness |
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(noun) an unintentional omission resulting from failure to notice something | Synonyms: oversight |
inadvertency | (noun) the trait of forgetting or ignoring your responsibilities | Synonyms: heedlessness, inadvertence, unmindfulness |
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inadvertent | (adjective) happening by chance or unexpectedly or unintentionally | Synonyms: accidental |
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inadvertently | (adverb) without knowledge or intention | Synonyms: unknowingly, unwittingly |
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incontrovertibility | (noun) the quality of being undeniable and not worth arguing about | Synonyms: incontrovertibleness, positiveness, positivity |
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incontrovertible | (adjective) necessarily or demonstrably true | Synonyms: demonstrable |
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(adjective) impossible to deny or disprove | Synonyms: irrefutable, positive |
incontrovertibleness | (noun) the quality of being undeniable and not worth arguing about | Synonyms: incontrovertibility, positiveness, positivity |
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incontrovertibly | (adverb) in an obvious and provable manner | Synonyms: demonstrably, provably |
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inconvertibility | (noun) the quality of not being exchangeable | - |
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inconvertible | (adjective) used especially of currencies; incapable of being exchanged for or replaced by another currency of equal value | Synonyms: unconvertible, unexchangeable |
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(adjective) not capable of being changed into something else | Synonyms: untransmutable |
intervertebral | (adjective) pertaining to the space between two vertebrae | - |
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introvert | (noun) (psychology) a person who tends to shrink from social contacts and to become preoccupied with their own thoughts | - |
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(verb) turn inside | - |
(verb) fold inwards | Synonyms: invaginate |
introverted | (adjective) given to examining own sensory and perceptual experiences | Synonyms: introspective, self-examining |
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introvertish | (adjective) somewhat introverted | Synonyms: shut-in |
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introvertive | (adjective) directed inward; marked by interest in yourself or concerned with inner feelings | Synonyms: introversive |
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invert | (verb) turn inside out or upside down | Synonyms: reverse, turn back |
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(verb) make an inversion (in a musical composition) | - |
(verb) reverse the position, order, relation, or condition of | Synonyms: reverse |
invertase | (noun) an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of sucrose into glucose and fructose | Synonyms: saccharase, sucrase |
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invertebrate | (adjective) lacking a backbone or spinal column | Synonyms: spineless |
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(noun) any animal lacking a backbone or notochord; the term is not used as a scientific classification | - |
inverted | (adjective) (of a plant ovule) completely inverted; turned back 180 degrees on its stalk | Synonyms: anatropous |
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(adjective) being in such a position that top and bottom are reversed | Synonyms: upside-down |
inverter | (noun) an electrical converter that converts direct current into alternating current | - |
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invertible | (adjective) having an additive or multiplicative inverse | - |
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nevertheless | (adverb) despite anything to the contrary (usually preceding a concession) | Synonyms: all the same, at the same time, even so, however, nonetheless, notwithstanding, still, withal, yet |
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overt | (adjective) open and observable; not secret or hidden | Synonyms: open |
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overtake | (verb) catch up with and possibly overtake | Synonyms: catch, catch up with |
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(verb) overcome, as with emotions or perceptual stimuli | Synonyms: overcome, overpower, overwhelm, sweep over, whelm |
(verb) travel past | Synonyms: overhaul, pass |
overtaking | (noun) going by something that is moving in order to get in front of it | Synonyms: passing |
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overtax | (verb) tax excessively | - |
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overthink | (verb) to spend to much time considering something and thus reach the wrong conclusion | - |
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overthrow | (noun) the termination of a ruler or institution (especially by force) | - |
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(noun) the act of disturbing the mind or body | Synonyms: derangement, upset |
(verb) rule against | Synonyms: override, overrule, overturn, reverse |
(verb) cause the downfall of; of rulers | Synonyms: bring down, overturn, subvert |
overtime | (noun) playing time beyond regulation, to break a tie | Synonyms: extra time |
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(noun) work done in addition to regular working hours | - |
(adverb) beyond the regular time | - |
overtire | (verb) tire excessively | Synonyms: overfatigue, overweary |
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overtly | (adverb) in an overt manner | - |
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overtolerance | (noun) too much permissiveness | - |
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overtone | (noun) a harmonic with a frequency that is a multiple of the fundamental frequency | Synonyms: partial, partial tone |
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(noun) (usually plural) an ulterior implicit meaning or quality | - |
overtop | (verb) look down on | Synonyms: command, dominate, overlook |
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overtrump | (verb) play a trump higher than (one previously played) to the trick | - |
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overture | (noun) a tentative suggestion designed to elicit the reactions of others | Synonyms: advance, approach, feeler |
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(noun) orchestral music played at the beginning of an opera or oratorio | - |
(noun) something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows | Synonyms: preliminary, prelude |
overturn | (noun) the act of upsetting something | Synonyms: turnover, upset |
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(noun) an improbable and unexpected victory | Synonyms: upset |
(verb) change radically | Synonyms: revolutionise, revolutionize |
(verb) rule against | Synonyms: override, overrule, overthrow, reverse |
(verb) cancel officially | Synonyms: annul, countermand, lift, repeal, rescind, reverse, revoke, vacate |
(verb) turn from an upright or normal position | Synonyms: tip over, tump over, turn over |
(verb) cause to overturn from an upright or normal position | Synonyms: bowl over, knock over, tip over, tump over, turn over, upset |
(verb) cause the downfall of; of rulers | Synonyms: bring down, overthrow, subvert |
overturned | (adjective) having been turned so that the bottom is no longer the bottom | Synonyms: upset, upturned |
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pervert | (noun) a person whose behavior deviates from what is acceptable especially in sexual behavior | Synonyms: degenerate, deviant, deviate, perv, perve |
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(verb) change the inherent purpose or function of something | Synonyms: abuse, misuse |
(verb) practice sophistry; change the meaning of or be vague about in order to mislead or deceive | Synonyms: convolute, sophisticate, twist, twist around |
(verb) corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality | Synonyms: corrupt, debase, debauch, demoralise, demoralize, deprave, misdirect, profane, subvert, vitiate |
perverted | (adjective) (used of sexual behavior) showing or appealing to bizarre or deviant tastes | Synonyms: kinky |
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(adjective) deviating from what is considered moral or right or proper or good | Synonyms: depraved, perverse, reprobate |
(adjective) having an intended meaning altered or misrepresented | Synonyms: distorted, misrepresented, twisted |
poverty | (noun) the state of having little or no money and few or no material possessions | Synonyms: impoverishment, poorness |
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proconvertin | (noun) a coagulation factor formed in the kidney under the influence of vitamin K | Synonyms: cothromboplastin, factor VII, stable factor |
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reconvert | (verb) convert back | - |
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retrovert | (verb) go back to a previous state | Synonyms: regress, return, revert, turn back |
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revert | (verb) go back to a previous state | Synonyms: regress, retrovert, return, turn back |
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(verb) undergo reversion, as in a mutation | - |
revertible | (adjective) to be returned to the former owner or that owner's heirs | - |
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reverting | (adjective) tending to return to an earlier state | Synonyms: returning |
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(noun) a failure to maintain a higher state | Synonyms: backsliding, lapse, lapsing, relapse, relapsing, reversion |
silvertip | (noun) powerful brownish-yellow bear of the uplands of western North America | Synonyms: grizzly, grizzly bear, silver-tip, Ursus arctos horribilis, Ursus horribilis |
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subvert | (verb) to raze to the ground, also figuratively | - |
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(verb) cause the downfall of; of rulers | Synonyms: bring down, overthrow, overturn |
(verb) destroy property or hinder normal operations | Synonyms: counteract, countermine, sabotage, undermine, weaken |
(verb) corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality | Synonyms: corrupt, debase, debauch, demoralise, demoralize, deprave, misdirect, pervert, profane, vitiate |
subverter | (noun) a radical supporter of political or social revolution | Synonyms: revolutionary, revolutionist, subversive |
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unconverted | (adjective) not converted | Synonyms: unpersuaded |
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