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* 광고글 무통보 삭제 및 북유모 활동 중지됩니다!!!
북유모 공지!!!
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북유모.
우햇햇...어렵닥
[2010학년도 고려대 영어A형 문제 및 정답]
1. A rent is money paid for the use of a capital asset, whether land, a building, an
A B
office, a car, a bicycle, or which someone might want but cannot or does not
C
want to own.
D
2. Climate change is melting glaciers high in the Himalayas, threatening crucial water
A
resources for much of Asia ― and giving us a convincing reason to fight them.
B C D
3. She likes to tell you in detail about television programs she finds them interesting,
A B
but they do not seem especially interesting the way she describes them.
C D
4. Many millions of dollars worthy gold, silver, and jewels have gone down with ships
A B
in numerous ship disasters. These treasures lie at the bottom of
C
almost every major body of water in the world.
D
5. Even seeing at a distance, eating his lunch at an open-air restaurant in Cannes
A B C
harbor, Picasso was instantly recognizable.
D
6. Telephones, television sets, and automobiles make life both more convenient and
A
more interesting. But either of them presents dangers that must be recognized and
B
controlled, unless we are willing to let them control us.
C D
7. Media attention has widened the appeal of home exchange over the past few years
A B
and a great many thousand of people make arrangements to exchange their homes
C
in order to take a holiday either in England or overseas.
D
8. Until I read To the Lighthouse, a novel by Virginia Woolf, I did not like reading,
A B
but this novel made me to enjoy reading very much.
C D
9. It is what you eat, not how hard you try to work off it, that matters more
A B C
in losing weight.
D
10. The earth is a planet bathe in light; it is therefore unsurprising that many of the
A B
living organisms that have evolved have developed
C
the biologically advantageous capacity to trap light energy.
D
11. Had psychological theories of economic cycles been helpful in predicting turning points in cycles, they _______ used more consistently.
A. have been
B. would have been
C. were
D. had been
12. The only responsible course of life is to deny oneself the ideological misuse of one's own existence, and for the rest to conduct oneself as modestly, unobtrusively, and unpretentiously _______.
A. as is requiring
B. is as required
C. as is required
D. requiring as is
13. _________ that the employees discussed at the series of meetings was resolved within a few weeks.
A. Most of the trouble
B. Most troubles
C. A most of troubles
D. Of the most trouble
14. Wherever I went shopping with my mother who was an outsider in an English-only world, our task inevitably led to
_______________ speak up to help my mother.
A. so an awkward scene that I had to
B. so awkward not a scene for me to
C. too awkward a scene for me not to
D. too an awkward scene that I had to
15. As a young man Einstein asked himself ________ to ride on a beam of light. It took him many years of thought experiments, however the answer helped him develop the special theory of relativity.
A. what would it like
B. what it would be like
C. what it would like
D. what would it like to be
16. In the United States, the emphasis was _________ the Constitution as a symbol or historical object as on the Constitution as a depository of democratic beliefs that were said to be fundamental and unshakeable.
A. not so much as on
B. not so much on
C. so much not on
D. on not so much as
17. There is no guarantee of a profit in any enterprise, which is why businesses, both large and small, ___________ all the time if they do not have enough political influence to get bailed out by the government.
A. go bankruptcy
B. go into bankrupt
C. go to bankrupting
D. go bankrupt
18. Confirm!!ing our conversation with our partner in China, I have arranged _________ on Monday.
A. for the shipment to be ordered
B. that the shipment to be ordered
C. the shipment for being ordered
D. with the shipment for being ordered
19. The logging industry has depleted a number of once abundant forests. ______ to plant new forests, much of this loss can never be recovered.
A. In spite some successful not always efforts
B. Despite of not always successful some efforts
C. Despite some not always successful efforts
D. In spite of some successful efforts not always
20. Some argue that we have a moral obligation to protect children from words and images that they are too young to understand. Others go _________ that today's artistic statements are escalating beyond what is healthy even for adults.
A. far so much as saying
B. so far as to say
C. as far as they saying
D. to say as far as
21. Real progress in understanding nature is rarely _________. All important advances are sudden intuitions, new principles, new ways of seeing.
A. compromised
B. acclaimed
C. ingenious
D. incremental
22. Moving an organizational mountain in a radically different, horizontal direction is not easy, regardless of benefit. Fear of change and widespread initiative fatigue make the status quo very ________.
A. precarious
B. cumbersome
C. seductive
D. obscure
23. Claude Monet’s paintings are always blurry and vague. He paints this way deliberately, because he wants to capture the way sunlight makes things ________.
A. shimmer
B. conspicuous
C. compact
D. perish
24. Political purpose is the desire to push the world in a certain direction, to alter other people’s idea of the kind of society they should strive after. No book is genuinely ______ political bias. The opinion that art should have nothing to do with politics is itself a political attitude.
A. compliant to
B. free from
C. controlled by
D. accountable for
25. It is ironic that businessmen are often morally __________ for their greed at seeking profit, even though profit is necessary if the wealth of a society is to grow and life is to get better.
A. condemned
B. uplifted
C. justified
D. extolled
26. We can tell whether we are happy by the sound of the wind. It warns the unhappy man of the fragility of his house, hounding him from shallow sleep and violent dreams. To the happy man it is the song of his ______: its furious howling concedes that it has power over him no longer.
A. exposure
B. perplexity
C. protectedness
D. vulnerability
27. To be fully normal is impossible. Everyone ________ the norm. Even if one belongs to the statistical majority in race, height, and weight, simply by the virtue of this unlikely combination of normalcies one’s profile would already be somewhat abnormal.
A. conforms to
B. acknowledges
C. trivializes
D. deviates from
28. Personality types are not ________ - most of us are a combination of many complexly interwined traits. No one trait wholly determines our tastes - various overlapping personality traits each exert an influence, as do cognitive abilities like language mastery and overall intelligence.
A. unclearly demarcated
B. easily inherited
C. essentially flexible
D. mutually exclusive
29. Our permanent enemy is __________. Man, biologically considered, and whatever else he may be in the bargain, is simply the most formidable of all beasts of prey, and indeed, the only one that preys systematically on its own species.
A. the bellicosity of human nature
B. the lassitude of civilization
C. the preval!!ent disregard of truth
D. the aspiration to humanitarianism
30. Literary awards are inherently subjective and potentially corrupting, but they are also perhaps the most powerful __________ we have regarding the decline of serious fiction, and the best way of bringing good narrative to a wider would that desperately needs it.
A. obstacle
B. endorsement
C. antidote
D. trigger
31. Unlike the carefully weighted and planned compositions of Dante, Goethe’s writings have always the sense of _______ and enthusiasm. He was a constant experimenter with life, with ideas, and with forms of writing.
A. immediacy
B. consistency
C. reflexivity
D. tenacity
32. Infants as young as 4 months can tell when a speaker switches languages just by watching the mouth ― a marker of how important visual cues are to language learning. But by 8 months, only babies raised in bilingual households have this ability; without continued exposure, some perceptual abilities ________.
A. recuperate
B. intensify
C. evolve
D. wane
33. As long as the acquisition of knowledge is rendered habitually repugnant, so long will there be a prevailing tendency to discontinue it when liberated from the _______ of parents and teachers.
A. nonchalance
B. coercion
C. apathy
D. indolence
34. Although most e-mail users have come to understand that messages remain on their computers even if deleted, text messages are often regarded as more ________. But messages can remain on the sender’s and receiver’s phones, and even if they are deleted, communication companies store them for anywhere from days to weeks.
A. ephemeral
B. confounding
C. obsolete
D. enduring
35. A writing style that depends on modifying nearly every noun with one or two adjectives and every verb with an adverb will end up being slow-moving and tedious. The fundamental principle in this matter is that exact verbs and nouns are to be preferred to general verbs and abstract nouns accompanied by adjective and adverb modifiers. What Mark Twain said about the adjective applies equally well to the adverb: "When in doubt, ______________."
A. flesh it out
B. embellish it
C. strike it out
D. highlight it
36. He who __________ runs the risk of believing himself better than others and misusing his critique of society as a basis for his private interest. The detached observer is as much entangled as the active participants; the only advantage of the former is insight into his entanglement, and the infinitesimal freedom that lies in knowledge as such.
A. is naturally selfless
B. stands aloof
C. lives the present
D. respects mankind
37. Our repeated failure to fully act as we would wish must not discourage us. It is the sincere intention that is the essential thing, and this will in time release us from the bondage of _______ which at present seem almost ________.
A. temptations ― impotent
B. regulations ― liberating
C. decisions ― impulsive
D. habits ― insuperable
38. Divergence in response to evolution is commonly expressed by altering the form and function of some part of the organism, the original identity of which is clearly ______. Thus, the structure that shows main change in connection with this adaptive divergence is commonly identified readily as _______.
A. remarkable ― dissimilar
B. disparate ― identical
C. discernible ― homologous
D. convertible ― analogous
39. There may be no better example of what is meant by _______ medicine than the strategy of vaccination. A healthy person is given a tiny taste of a virus ― flu or polio, say ― that is too weak to cause illness but just enough to introduce the body to the pathogen. If the virus later shows up for real, the immune system is _______ and waiting for it.
A. preventive ― primed
B. conservative ― numbed
C. alternative ― sabotaged
D. innovative ― stupefied
40. Virtues, like viruses, have their season of _________. When catastrophe strikes, generosity spikes like a fever. Courage spreads in the face of tyranny. But some virtues _______ for generations, as we have seen with thrift, making its comeback after 40 years in cold storage.
A. malaise ― are pliant
B. contagion ― go dormant
C. desolation ― are potent
D. sequestration ― remain rampant
[41-42]
Print has shriveled, radio has gone mute and the Internet has obviously soaked up a lot of those lost eyeballs and ears. The big losers are evidently print and radio. Old-fashioned print represented approximately a quarter of consumed words in 1960, and now struggles along at 9 percent, one=third of computers. The big winner is phones, which have exploded as a source of reading in the last few years. Mobile ad spending is expected to grow 15percent next year. That prediction could be conservative. As the smart phone was between phone companies heats up, the competition will only drive up their capacity and utility and encourage more people to think of their phones as small computers that can make calls, rather than phones pretending to be small computers. .
41. Choose the one closest in meaning to the understand "That prediction could be conservative."
A. Conservative trends in mass media might affect the advertising industry.
B. Mobile advertising has yet to reach a higher level of sophistication.
C. The public may largely ignore the mobile phones as a medium for advertising.
D. Mobile advertising could grow to be a bigger business than is estimated.
42. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. New multi-purpose phones are perplexing.
B. A return to old-fashioned print may be the solution.
C. The information revolution is living in your pocket.
D. Mobile advertising is a blessing in disguise.
[43-45]
Style is one part identity: self-awareness and self-knowledge. You cannot have style until you have articulated a self. And style requires security - feeling at home in one’s body, physically and mentally. Of course, like all knowledge, self-knowledge must be updated as you grow and evolve; style takes ongoing self-assessment.
Style is also one part personality: spirit, verve, attitude, wit, inventiveness. It demands the desire and confidence to express whatever mood one wishes. Such variability is not only necessary but a reflection of a person’s unique complexity as a human being. People want to be themselves and to be seen as themselves. In order to work, style must reflect the real self, the character and personality of the individual; anything less appears to be _____________.
Lastly, style is one part fashion. It is possible to have lots of clothes and not an ounce of style. But it is also possible to have very few clothes and lots of style. Fashion is the means through which we express style, but it takes less in the way of clothes to be stylish than you might imagine. That is why generations of women have coveted the little black dress, a garment so unassuming in line and perfect in proportion that it is the finest foil for excursions into self-expression!!.
43. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. a costume
B. a reality
C. a snare
D. a homage
44. Which of the following can be inferred about "style"?
A.It rarely changes over time after a certain age.
B. It should not make you uncomfortable.
C. It is dictated by what others think of you.
D. It is dependent on current fashion trends.
45. According to the passage, style is associated with the __________ of clothes.
A. pretentiousness
B. extravagance
C. conveyance
D. alteration
[46-47]
By definition, state-organized capitalism involved the use of public political power to regulate economic markets. This was largely a matter of crisis management in the interest of capital. Nevertheless, the states in question derived much of their political legitimacy from their claims to promote social equality and cross-class solidarity. Yet these ideals were interpreted in an economistic and class-centric way. In the political culture of state-organized capitalism, social questions were framed chiefly in distributive terms, as matters concerning _________, while social divisions were viewed primarily through the prism of class. Thus, the quintessential social injustice was unfair economic distribution, and its paradigm expression!! was class inequality. The effect of this class-centric, economistic view was to marginalize, if not wholly to obscure, other dimensions, sites, and axes of injustice.
46. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. the suppression of civil rights by the state and its harmful effects
B. the divergent political opinions across different social classes
C. the chronic problem resulting from immigration and cultural displacement
D. the equitable allocation of divisible goods including income and jobs
47. Which of the following can be inferred about "state-organized capitalism"?
A. Its limited approach to social problems tends to downplay injustices caused by other factors than class.
B. It legitimizes the power of the government in all sectors of society so that it
may effectively address social problems.
C. Its frequent crises necessitate the reinforced authority of the state in regulating
the market economy.
D. It restrains the power of the government mainly to foster cooperation among
different groups of people.
[48-50]
As mobile increasingly takes center stage in telecommunications, we expect a major consolidation effect spreading from operators to system vendors. Globalization will lead to fewer, bigger multinational operators of fixed and mobile services. The incumbent telecommunications operators are preparing for new entrants in the telecommunications arena. They anticipate that these new entrants will compete to gain market share with a broad range of services. Cable companies may pose a direct threat to incumbent telecoms operations. The obstacle for cable companies, however, is that they tend to be much smaller, highly geared businesses that may not attract the investment needed to develop a substantial telecoms operation. Their balance sheets tend to be unattractive to investors because they show high growth, but with high investment, and their management skills tend to be thin. To be credible, long-term competitors to telephone companies, cable companies will have to be astute in how they upgrade or engineer their cable networks to accommodate two-way interactive services. Telecommunications companies, on the other hand, have high benefits but slow growth, and they must prepare for the inevitable erosion of their profits with competition. They are often hindered by bureaucratic cultures that are ill-equipped to respond nimbly to competition or to pursue emerging opportunities effectively.
48. What is the best title for the passage?
A. The Rise and Fall of the Telecommunications Boom
B. Escalating Competition in the Telecommunications Market
C. Risk-Taking in Telecommunications Innovation
D. Setting Standards for the Telecommunications Industry
49. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
A. Telecommunication companies may have to reform their bureaucratic structure to meet new challenges.
B. New entrants into the telecommunications market are more likely to succeed than incumbents.
C. Competition will slow down the globalization of telecommunications companies.
D. Well-established cable companies should take the lead in acquiring smaller ones.
50. According to the passage, which aspect is not associated with cable companies?
A. They are relatively small in terms of capacity.
B. They are multinational and globalized.
C. They do not attract much investment.
D. They want to enter the telecoms market.
[51-53]
To find out whether a person means us well there is one almost infallible criterion: how he passes on unkind or hostile remarks about us. Usually such reports are ______, nothing but pretexts to help ill will on its way without taking responsibility. Just as all feel an inclination to say something disparaging about everyone occasionally, so at the same time each is sensitive to the views of others, and secretly wishes to be loved even where he does not himself love: no less indiscriminate and general than the alienation between people is the longing to breach it. In this climate the passer on flourishes, never short of damaging material and ever secure in the knowledge that those who wish to be liked by everyone are always avidly on the lookout for evidence of the contrary. One ought to transmit denigratory remarks only when they relate directly and transparently to shared decisions, to the assessment of people on whom one has to rely, for example in working with them. It is relatively harmless if the teller simply wants to set the two parties against each other while showing off his own qualities. More frequently he comes forward as the appointed mouthpiece of public opinion, and by his very dispassionate objectivity lets the victim feel the whole power of anonymity to which he must bow. The lie is manifest in the unnecessary concern for the honor of the injured party ignorant of his injury, for everything being above board, for inner cleanliness. By dint of moral zeal, the will-meaning become destroyers.
51. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. It is unfair to speak of others behind their back, but such a breach of decency is not common.
B. If we want to be on good terms with everyone around us, we need to look out for unkind rumors.
C. Wanting to be liked by everyone is a universal desire but it is ultimately impossible.
D. Relaying others’ malicious remarks about someone to him can be an act of dubious kindness.
52. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. straightforward
B. exhilarating
C. superfluous
D. imperative
53. What is the tone of the passage?
A. critical
B. laudatory
C. optimistic
D. flippant
[54-57]
Climate Deal Likely to Bear Big Price Tag (원문제목 )
Negotiations at the UN climate change conference will entail profound shifts in energy production, dislocations of people, sweeping changes in agriculture and forestry and the creation of complex new markets in global warming pollution credits.
The cost will be trillions of dollars over the next few decades. It is an important sum but a relatively small fraction of the world’s total economic output. In energy infrastructure alone, the transformational ambitions that delegates to the conference are expected to set in the coming days will cost more than $10 trillion dollars. As scary as that number sounds, the costs would ramp up relatively slowly and be largely ________ by economic benefits in new jobs, improved lives, more secure energy supplies and a reduced danger of climate catastrophe. There are also varying estimates of the economic costs of failing to act to address the problem soon, some of them very high.
At the conference, many poor nations are insisting that wealthier nations make deeper cuts in their emissions and contribute more money to help the poorer countries. Over time, some of the hundreds of billions of dollars the poorer countries are demanding will begin to flow, as global carbon markets become established and governments in rich countries begin to open the spigot of public spending.
But in the meantime, the industrialized countries have proposed a relatively modest fund of about $10 billion a year for each of the next three or four years to help poorer countries adapt. Even that effort remains the subject of conflict over which countries should contribute how much, what body should oversee the spending and how to determine which projects qualify for finance.
54. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. increased
B. preserved
C. distorted
D. offset
55. Which of the following cannot be inferred from the passage?
A. The cost of curbing carbon dioxide emissions is far greater than that of preparing for climate changes caused by it.
B. Efforts are being made to negotiate the cost of forestalling global warming among countries.
C. Current discussions on climate change are apt to introduce major changes in the ways in which energy is produced and consumed.
D. There is controversy over how the proposed fund from wealthier countries should be allocated andspent.
56. According to the passage, which of the following is not true of developing countries?
A. They insisted that developed countries further reduce their carbon dioxide emissions.
B. They are ready to fully finance their own renewable energy projects.
C. They would be able to encourage landowners to preserve forests with the money demanded.
D. They could better deal with the consequences of rising sea levels with monetary assistance.
57. What is the best title for the passage?
A. Renewable Energy for a Better Future
B. Signs of Climate Change Heralding Disaster
C. Climate Deal Likely to Incur High Price
D. Reducing Costs of Environmental Preservation
[58-60]
The greatest of all Greek scientific discoveries was the discovery - or rather, the invention - of nature itself. The Greeks defined nature as the universe minus human beings and their culture. Although this seems to us to be the most obvious sort of distinction, no other civilization came upon it. A feasible account of how the Greeks happened to invent nature is that they came to make a distinction between the external, objective world and the internal, subjective one. And this distinction came about because the Greeks, unlike everyone else, had a clear understanding of subjectivity arising from the tradition of debate. It makes no sense for you to try to persuade me of something unless you believe that there is a reality out there that you apprehend better than I do. You may be able to force me to do what you want and even into saying that I believe what you do. But you will not persuade me until I believe that your subjective interpretation of some state of affairs is superior to mine. So, in effect, objectivity arose from subjectivity - the recognition that two minds could have different representations of the world and that the world has an existence _________.
58. What is the purpose of the passage?
A. to demonstrate how an effective debate should be carried out
B. to underscore the Greeks’ contributions to natural science
C. to show the relationship between humans and nature
D. to explain how the Greeks developed the concept of objectivity
59. Choose the one that best fills in the blank.
A. independent of either representation
B. rationalized through argument
C. balanced between these polar standpoints
D. contingent on a superior perspective
60. According to the passage, which aspect is associated with debate?
A. The more knowledgeable person usually has more power.
B. A conclusion is reached when one is convinced by the other.
C. One is required to provide details to undermine the other’s argument.
D. Simple language is used in order to avoid misunderstanding.
[61-65]
Care theory offers a means of rethinking moral problems from a frame that emphasizes affective and emotive capacities without completely slighting empirical and rational thought. Care theory is grounded in receptivity, relatedness, and responsiveness. Receptivity involves the ability for the one-caring, or the carer, to move beyond empathy and toward duality and engrossment in the lives of others. Relatedness refers to the connection that people have on a continuum of intimacy from mates, family, friends, colleagues, and neighbors. Responsiveness corresponds to the ability of the one-caring to provide care for those in relationship with them. Emerging from a feminist perspective are theory is not exclusive to women, although women may be predisposed to implementing care due to socialization patterns.
Caring has four components; modeling, dialogue, practice, and confirm!!ation. Modeling is the way that those in a position of one-caring act towards others regardless of what they say they believe about caring. Dialogue is open-ended and genuine, where neither party knows at the outset what the outcome or decision will be. Practice is concerned with manner in which those who are cared for have the opportunity to gain skills and insights about care-giving. Confirm!!ation is similar to the notion of unconditional positive regard, as the one-caring recognizes the fundamental humanity and dignity of the person, regardless of particular behaviors.
61. Choose the one closest in meaning to the underlined part.
A. becoming distant and also respectful of how others live
B. becoming a partner with and engaging with others
C. becoming a supervisor of and responsible for others’ actions
D. becoming wary and critical of the actions of others
62. According to the passage, which of the following is true about confirm!!ation?
A. What the other person says and does should be accepted without reservation.
B. The one-caring should castigate people for making mistakes
C. Attention should be paid to the exteriority of the person
D. Judgments of a person should not disregard people’s opinions.
63. Which of the following can be inferred about "caring"?
A. It provides a chance for the cared for to experience how caring is conducted.
B. It does not apply to men who tend not to be the primary carers in the family.
C. It arises uniformly regardless of the degree of intimacy between the carer and the cared for.
D. It varies according to the emotional state of the carer.
64. According to The passage, which aspect is not associated with care theory?
A. receptivity
B. relatedness
C. rehabilitation
D. responsiveness
65. What is the purpose of the passage?
A. to explain the concept of and methods in care theory
B. to challenge conventional views on caring
C. to identify the reasons why care theory is persuasive
D. to encourage people to be more caring of others
[66~67]
In the U.S., companies are registered by states, not the federal government. Delaware, the second smallest of the 50 states, attracts more than its fair share of corporations from across the U.S. In fact, over half of publicly-traded corporations and 60% of 500 companies surveyed select Delaware as the jurisdiction of incorporation. The reasons are not hard to fathom. First, Delaware offers little protection to shareholders and creditors seeking to sue corporate officials for malfeasance. Secondly, judges called chancellors, not juries, decide such cases. Finally, Delaware makes incorporate easy as there are only five steps. Applicants must first determine the business entity type (limited company, general partnership, limited liability etc.). Next hire a registered agent who ~ partnership in Delaware (only if the company is no actually lives operational in Delaware) and then reserve a name for the company, a process that costs only $75. The fourth step includes acquiring a certificate of incorporation, which can cost anywhere from $89 ~ $200, depending on the type of business, and ~ last is filing the certificate with the State Delaware. Fees are payable at the time of filing.
66. For a company registering a business in Delaware what is not necessary?
A. deciding the legal form the company will take ~
B. hiring an agent who is a resident of Delaware
C. paying $75 to reserve a name in the likely ~ the application is successful
D. ensuring that the federal government officially receives the certificate of incorporation
67. What is not an implied reason why so many companies register in Delaware?
A. Registration fees are relatively affordable.
B. Shareholders’ legal rights are strongly protected.
C. Fees are payable when the application is filed.
D. Juries are not involved in malfeasance cases.
[68-70]
68. What does the graph show?
A. the changing sales value of three products six months
B. a comparison of the rise in the products of three products in 2009
C. the sales generated by three products on basis
D. the fluctuation of sales values and its ~ on the economy in 2009
69. In which of the following months does ~ value of Product X exceed Product Z?
A. March
B. April
C. May
D. June
70. According to the graph, which of the following is not true?
A. Product X shows the deepest decline in sales value between January and February.
B. After February Product Y continuously shows a higher sales value than Products X and Y
C. March shows the largest difference in sales value between product Y and product Z.
D. Product Y shows the least difference between its lowest and highest sales value.
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첫댓글 thx for sharing.. hehe
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