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Travel Cultures Language

A Tale Told by Idioms

by Meredith Mullins on May 6, 2019

Person in search of idioms, telling a story of proverbs and sayings. (Image © iStock/Borchee.)

An etymological quest
© iStock/Borchee

The Phases of Phrases: Proverbs and Sayings

Once upon a time there was a wandering etymologist—a true lover of language. She had been living high on the hog for many years, enjoying the materialistic pleasures of the world.

More often than not, she was three sheets to the wind. That was her choice at the time—so no crocodile tears need be shed for her. Someday, the world hoped, she would understand the importance of minding her Ps and Qs.

People would have categorized her as upper crust. But at an important life juncture, this lifestyle became tedious to her, more of a burden than a joy. She decided to start over with a clean slate—to live life a little more off the cuff.

Even though she was, what some might cruelly say “long in the tooth,” (and, by the way, she would have told those folks to put a sock in it), she felt a surge in her soul to wander. As she did, her quest became clear.

With each step of the journey, proverbs and sayings kept leaping into her walking meditations. “Oh, I see” moments were imminent. She knew she had purpose—a syntactic search to find the origins of the many idiomatic sayings that exist in the English language.

And so, she went forth with fervor, on a path as direct as the crow flies.

Here are a few of her favorites (all open to alternative theories) . . .

High on the Hog

High on the hog, which means to live with extravagance, is an idiom dating to the 1800s.

It was said that the best cuts of meat were from the upper part of the pig’s body. The wealthiest people feasted on cuts from the back and loin, while the poor learned to make the most of the knuckles, feet, and jowls.

Pig's feet demonstrating what the idiom high on the hog means, since proverbs and sayings tell interesting stories. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Times have changed. Pigs’ feet can become a favorite dish.
© Meredith Mullins

Three Sheets to the Wind

This saying —meaning drunk—comes from the world of sailing ships, and was first cited in novels of the 1800s.

The ropes on a ship, called “sheets” secure the lower corners of the sails. There are two (and possibly more) derivations for the phrase.

One suggests that if three sheets are loose at the bottom of the sail, the sail will flap wildly and the boat will lurch like a drunk.

A more technical derivation explains that, if the jibs (small sails) are sheeted to the wind (sideways to the wind), which is often done during a storm, the boat rolls wildly from side to side, out of control.

Either way, it’s a good description of ultimate inebriation.

Yacht sails and rigging demonstrating the idiom three sheets to the wind, one of the proverbs and sayings that is used often in the English language. (Image © iStock/Pi-lens.)

Have you ever been three sheets to the wind? Or four?
© iStock/Pi-lens

Crocodile Tears

The saying “crocodile tears” means an insincere expression of sorrow—a pretense of sympathy.

References appear as early as the 14th century and make literary appearances in Shakespeare and in the work of other writers throughout time.

The tears that you might see from a crocodile are not the result of emotion. Part of the myth of tears was linked to feeding. Crocodiles were observed crying after devouring something.

Would a crocodile weep for something it gobbled down? Unlikely. But their tear ducts were activated by feeding.

Also, crocodiles sunning themselves often keep their mouths open, which causes their tear glands to water.

Crocodile with a tear in its eye, showing the idiom of crocodile tears, one of the proverbs and sayings that is popular in the English language. (Image © iStock/Dikuch.)

A crocodile’s lament
© iStock/Dikuch

Mind Your Ps and Qs

This phrase has several possible derivations, but all agree that it means to mind your manners,  be polite, and be careful of your behavior.

The phrase could possible come from learning lowercase letters, since p’s and q’s are similar in form except for the placement of the descender.

However, the more common explanation comes from British pubs, where the bartenders kept an eye on how many pints or quarts were consumed. If drinkers became too unruly, the bartender would caution them to mind their Ps and Qs or they would be thrown out.

Beer glasses showing the idiom mind your Ps and Qs, one of the popular proverbs and sayings in the English language. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Cheers! But mind your Ps and Qs.
© Meredith Mullins

Upper Crust

Similar to “high on the hog” being the best part of the pig’s meat, one possible origin of this phrase was that the upper crust of bread was believed to be the best part of the bread loaf.

In 16th century Europe, servants were given the bottom of the loaf (often easily burned), the family was given the middle, and guests were given the top (upper crust).

Today, the phrase means upper class, aristocratic, and part of the highest social class.

Loaf of bread showing the idiom upper crust, one of the proverbs and sayings that is popular in the English language. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

This loaf offers a mouth-watering upper crust.
© Meredith Mullins

Start Over with a Clean Slate

We might all relish an opportunity to start over with a clean slate—to begin again with no baggage and no remnants of the past to unduly influence our actions and thoughts.

One origin of the phrase was nautical (a common starting point for many idioms). A ship’s crew kept a slate tablet to record data during a watch. At the start of the next watch, the slate was wiped clean if there were no problems noted.

The phrase is sometimes also linked to a slate tablet kept by shopkeepers (long before computers), recording a person’s purchases on account. When the account was paid off, the slate was wiped clean.

A clean slate tablet showing the idiom of starting over with a clean slate, one of the popular proverbs and sayings in the English language. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Starting over with a clean slate is a helpful option.
© Meredith Mullins

Off the Cuff

“Off the Cuff” equates to spontaneity or unplanned actions. The phrase is said to have originated as public speakers made brief notes on their shirt cuffs to help them with their speeches (usually not in indelible ink).

Teleprompters have now taken the place of spontaneity in many circumstances, but a speech from the heart still takes the prize.

A shirt cuff with post-it notes, showing the idiom off the cuff, one of the popular proverbs and sayings in the English language. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

A little help from our cuff friends (post-it notes save the shirt cuff)
© Meredith Mullins

Long in the Tooth

“Long in the tooth” is a visually dramatic (and a tad undiplomatic) way of saying getting old. The phrase comes from the equine world, where the age of a horse can be determined by checking its teeth. Since a horse’s gums recede with age, the longer the horse’s teeth appear, the older it is.

Etiquette hint: Don’t use this phrase if you want to remain friends with someone who is getting older.

Horse showing its teeth and showing the idiom long in the tooth, one of the popular proverbs and sayings in the English language. (Image © iStock/Treasurephoto.)

Who says I’m “long in the tooth”?
© iStock/Treasurephoto

Put a Sock in It

Sometimes we just don’t want to hear what someone is saying. This phrase basically means “be quiet,” or, more directly, “shut up.”

The phrase is said to have come from the old gramophone days (the early 1900s). Since the first gramophones didn’t have volume controls, the best way to lower the volume was to put a rolled up sock in the horn.

One could argue that putting a sock in the annoying speaker’s mouth would be equally efficient.

Vintage gramophone showing the idiom put a sock in it, one of the popular proverbs and sayings in the English language. (Image © iStock/Fergregory.)

How many socks does it take to lower the volume on an old gramophone?
© iStock/Fergregory

As the Crow Flies

The crow phrase is a popular one, still used often today. It means the most direct route. The saying originates from the early days of British sailing ships.

When a ship needed to get its bearings, a caged crow was released. Since crows aren’t that fond of water, the bird always flew straight toward the nearest land and provided a rough navigational setting.

However, captains beware. A crow does not always fly in a straight line. It often swirls and swoops in grand arcs.

A crow by water, showing the idiom as the crow flies, one of the popular proverbs and sayings from the English language. (Image © DMT.)

Which way will the crow fly?
© DMT

Although the origins of many proverbs and sayings have been proved to be just good storytelling—not at all based in fact—it is always fun to imagine idioms at their most entertaining. The English language offers a rich selection.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

On the Road Again: The Art of Travel

by Meredith Mullins on March 25, 2019

Center of the Nation sign, a roadside sign that invites the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

In search of America
© DMT

Discovering America: Roadside Signs and Attractions

What keeps you going isn’t some fine destination but just the road you’re on, and the fact that you know how to drive.
—Barbara Kingsolver

There are hundreds of quotes about the art of travel (and the art of living), especially words that suggest that the journey matters as much as the destination . . . often more.

This philosophy is right on target when exploring one of the cornerstones of American life—the road trip.

Four million miles of highways can tell a good story—the roadside signs and attractions offer a realistic glimpse into the fabric of America.

South Dakota state road sign, showing the power of road signs for the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

Welcome to South Dakota.
© DMT

From the Burma Shave ads of the 50s and 60s that stretched their storyline into six sequential signs to the roadside signs and attractions of today, we are given a window to the character of the people and places along the highway.

All we have to do is look.

Oh I see. What a great way to discover America.

Horse sign, an unusual roadside sign encouraging the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

Americana at its best
© DMT

In the Beginning . . .


WE’RE WIDELY READ
AND OFTEN QUOTED
BUT IT’S SHAVES
NOT SIGNS
FOR WHICH WE’RE NOTED
Burma-Shave

When you ask what roadside signs are lodged in memory, most people who were in a car in the 50s and 60s will smile as they recall the Burma Shave signs.

The company was known for its innovative roadside advertising. Each of the six signs posted at intervals along the road had one line of verse. The grand finale was BURMA-SHAVE—the brushless shaving cream of the time.

The poems were often quoted; and travelers, it was said, could never read just one of the signs. The fun was putting the poem all together.

WE DON’T
KNOW HOW
TO SPLIT AN ATOM
BUT AS TO WHISKERS
LET US AT ‘EM
Burma-Shave

THE CROWD
YOU SEE
AROUND THAT STORE
ARE BURMA SHAVERS
BUYING MORE
Burma-Shave

DON’T LOSE
YOUR HEAD
TO GAIN A MINUTE
YOU NEED YOUR HEAD
YOUR BRAINS ARE IN IT
Burma-Shave

The signs worked well for the company, growing its brand significantly and, in many instances, increasing attention on highway safety. Sadly, the last of these signs disappeared from the roadside in 1966.

Hell Is Real! roadside sign encouraging the art of travel. (Image © iStock/tacojim.)

Not quite Burma Shave, but eye catching just the same
© iStock/tacojim

We All Need a Little Humor in Our Lives

Several creative characters on today’s highways have continued the inventive roadside spirit of keeping drivers amused, informed, and awake.

Vince Rozmiarek of the Indian Hills Community Center in Colorado posts a few pearls of wisdom each week on the community center’s sign.

DOGS
CAN’T OPERATE
MRI SCANNERS
BUT CATSCAN

PUNS ABOUT
COMMUNISM AREN’T
FUNNY UNLESS
EVERYONE
GETS THEM

TURNING VEGAN
WOULD BE A
BIG
MISSED STEAK

MY MOOD RING
IS MISSING
AND I DON’T
KNOW HOW I FEEL
ABOUT THAT

PROCRASTINATORS
ANONYMOUS
MEETING
POSTPONED
INDEFINITELY

Indian Hills Community Center roadside sign, encouraging the art of travel. (Image courtesy of Indian Hills Community Center.)

Indian Hills Community Center’s Creative Genius
Photo Courtesy of Indian Hills Community Center

The El Arroyo Restaurant in Austin, Texas shows the same genius in their changing billboard.

  • Six out of seven dwarves aren’t Happy.
  • Anything I say before coffee cannot be used against me.
  • Dear Math. Grow up and solve your own problems.
  • Treat your mom to a margarita. You’re probably the reason she drinks.

 And, one in an attempt at highway safety:

  • If you’re reading this sign, you’re not watching the road.

Guided by Roadside Signs

Roadside signs provide more than just a smile for highway travelers. They also tempt those on the road to the food and sights of the region.

Who could resist love, peace, and chicken grease?

Love, Peace, andChicken Grease roadside sign, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © Lauren Gezurian-Amlani.)

© Lauren Gezurian-Amlani

Or pork with an attitude?

Pork with an attitude roadside sign in Memphis, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © Lauren Gezurian-Amlani.)

© Lauren Gezurian-Amlani

 

Or 24-hour coffee?

24-hour coffee roadsign, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © iStock/anna42f.)

© iStock/anna42f

Or Bar and BBQ at the Redneck Riviera?

Redneck Riviera roadside sign, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © Lauren Gezurian-Amlani.)

© Lauren Gezurian-Amlani

Along with the temptation of local culinary treasures comes the need to break up long drives with roadside attractions—from the historic to the bizarre.

Every state has “roadside attraction pride,” from the world’s largest this and that to art installations to historic monuments to seductive entertainment conglomerates.

A roadside sign with a burger and apple pie, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

Living the heartland of America: hot dogs and apple pie
© DMT

We can travel to Montgomery, Alabama, for the world’s largest brick; to North Pole, Alaska, for the world’s largest Santa Claus; to Cawker City, Kansas, for the world’s largest ball of twine; to Scarborough, Maine, for the world’s largest chocolate moose; and to Cottonwood, Idaho, for the world’s largest beagle, which also happens to be the Dog Bark Park Inn, a dog-friendly hotel.

The Dog Bark Park Inn in Cottonwood, Idaho, a roadside sign and roadside attraction, encouraging the art of travel. (Image courtesy of Dog Bark Park Inn.)

The Dog Bark Park Inn in Idaho
Photo courtesy of Dog Bark Park Inn

In addition to the plethora of “world’s largest” things, we can also find the artistic and bizarre.

Don’t miss Salvation Mountain in Niland, California; Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, Texas; the Ventriloquist Museum in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky; the Jello-O Museum in Le Roy, New York; an alien-themed brothel in Amargosa Valley, Nevada; Bubblegum Alley in San Luis Obisbo, California; or the world’s largest collection of the world’s smallest versions of the world’s largest things in Lucas, Kansas.

Salvation Mountain, California, one of the roadside signs and roadside attractions that encourage the art of travel. (Image © iStock/Steven Kriemadis.)

Salvation Mountain . . . Stay on Path
© iStock/Steven Kriemadis

We might be surprised with the number of Stonehenge replicas across our great nation, including Foamhenge in Natural Bridge, Virginia; Carhenge in Alliance, Nebraska; and Bamahenge in, you guessed it, Alabama (Elberta).

The Enchanted Highway in North Dakota, one of the road signs and roadside attractions that encourages the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

The Enchanted Highway in North Dakota
© DMT

Some of America’s roadside attraction legends are still going strong.

The Enchanted Highway in North Dakota features a series of innovative scrap metal sculptures at intervals along a 32-mile stretch of highway.

The Mitchell Corn Palace in South Dakota takes pride in its more than 127-year history as the only corn palace in the U.S.—replacing the corn-mural walls every year with 13 different colors of corn.

And the single spot in the U.S. where four states meet still attracts thousands of visitors each year, all trying to strike a precarious balance between Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado (can you really be in more than one place at the same time?).

At Four Corners, a roadside sign and roadside attraction in four western states, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © Frank Mullins.)

Straddling four states at Four Corners
© Frank Mullins

Aside from the legends and the bizarre, there are subtle things we drive past that make us smile or give us a ping of nostalgia, as if we are perhaps seeing the last vestige of a particular America.

Lemonade stand, one of the roadside signs and roadside attractions, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © DMT.)

© DMT

The roadside signs and attractions will no doubt be different the next time we travel that road. Some other country may soon boast the world’s largest ball of twine or the largest chocolate moose.

Acme Feed and skyscraper, a roadside sign of change, seen with the art of travel. (Image © Lauren Gezurian-Amlani.)

Change is a constant.
© Lauren Gezurian-Amlani

As with any good journey, change is a constant. The art of travel is to enjoy the journey.

Welcome to California road sign, encouraging the art of travel. (Image © iStock/Mirolslav1.)

Enjoy the journey.
© iStock/Miroslav1

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

Author’s Note: I dedicate this post to my parents (and all parents who venture on family road trips with kids). My parents’ patience and bravery in orchestrating numerous road trips resulted in my having seen many of the things that I mention in this article. The Corn Palace and Four Corners are still vivid memories years and years later, and the world’s biggest ball of twine still makes cameo appearances in my dreams. 

A Monumental Race: The Eiffel Tower Vertical

by Meredith Mullins on March 18, 2019

Night shot of the Eiffel Tower, one of the amazing places on earth, for the Eiffel Tower Vertical race. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

A hint of the moon on the night of the Eiffel Tower Vertical race
© Meredith Mullins

One of the Most Amazing Places in the World Rises to the Challenge

Remember those days as a child when you couldn’t help but run up stairs, two or three at a time.

You often didn’t know (or care) what you would find at the top. You were just excited to get there in a burst of energy, wrapped in the sheer joy of running.

That same exhilaration still exists. In Paris last week, running up stairs (two or three at a time) took center stage—during the 5th annual Eiffel Tower Vertical race.

La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel—one of the most challenging tower races in the world—made one of the most amazing places in the world even more thrilling.

Two runners at the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Moments of joy at La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel 2019
© Meredith Mullins

The Vertical Challenge

The race is legendary. Tower runners from all continents vie to participate.

Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, one of the most amazing places on earth, hosts the Eiffel Tower Vertical run 2019. (Image © Meredith Mulllins.)

The 1,665 steps of the Eiffel Tower become even more challenging on the night of the race.
© Meredith Mullins

The 1,665 steps, which gain 276 meters (three football fields) in altitude, make this one of the most difficult races in tower running—a vertical tour that includes such skyscrapers as One World Trade Center in New York (2,226 steps), the Lotte World Tower in Seoul (2,917 steps), the International Commerce Center in Hong Kong (2,120 steps), and the Jumeirah Emirates Towers in Dubai (1,334 steps).

International Commerce Center in Hong Kong , one of the tallest buildings and most amazing places in the world for tower runners who have participated in the Eiffel Tower Vertical. (Image © bpperry/iStock.)

Tower running reaches new heights, including the International Commerce Center in Hong Kong.
© bpperry/iStock

Only 130 runners were accepted into the Paris race this year—one runner for each year of the Eiffel Tower’s existence. (The Eiffel Tower was built in 1889 for the Universal Exposition. With just a bit of math calculation: In 2018, the race hosted 129 runners, and for 2020 . . . 131 runners.)

Of the 90 men and 40 women selected, 40 are elite runners, 80 are amateurs, and 10 are wild-card recipients.

Janet Goodwin, an entry in the Eiffel Tower Vertical race came to one of the amazing places in the world for this tower race. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Australian Janet Goodwin, a wild-card recipient and stair-climbing trainer,
flew 22 hours just for the race.
© Meredith Mullins

Jean-Charles Perrin—founder of La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel and EcoTrail International CEO—is rightfully proud. “There are tower races in many countries, but creating a race at such an iconic monument makes it special.”

The Eiffel Tower is the tallest structure in Paris and one of the most visited monuments on the planet. It took years of negotiations to bring the race to this historic tower.

Jean-Charles Perrin, founder of the Eiffel Tower Vertical race, at the Eiffel Tower, one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Jean-Charles Perrin, the founder of La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel, cheers on the runners.
© Meredith Mullins

What also makes the Eiffel Tower so special are the unique challenges for the competitors. It’s the only tower race that is outside—open to the elements.

Add to that the complexity of spiral stairs (some so narrow that no runner can pass another), steps of varying sizes, and a combination of stairs and flat stretches—from one staircase to the next, from one floor to the next, or as runners move from the south pillar to the west pillar for the climb.

ECOTRAILORGA_CHRISTOPHEGUIARD_Laurent Vincente runs in the Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Photo © EcoTrail Organization.)

French runner Laurent Vincente surrounded by the structure of “The Iron Lady”
Photo courtesy of the EcoTrail Organization

The stairs from the second to the third étage are not open to the public, so the runners have the unique privilege of climbing these stairs in the last leg of the race.

Oh, I see. This is one tough race. But the expansive view of Paris at the top is well worth the climb.

ECOTRAILORGA_CHRISTOPHEGUIARD, a woman running up stairs at the Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the amazing places on earth. (Image © EcoTrail Organization.)

Fighting for the reward at the top: a finish line with a view.
Photo courtesy of the EcoTrail Organization

A Dramatic History

The Eiffel Tower has the distinction of hosting the first-ever stair climbing race more than 100 years ago.

In 1905, a daily sports newspaper organized the “Stair Championship,” which attracted more than 300 participants to climb two levels of the Eiffel Tower (only 729 steps rather than the three levels and 1,665 steps of today).

Stairs of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France, one of the most amazing places on earth and host to the Eiffel Tower Vertical race. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

The Eiffel Tower stairs have always called to adventurers.
© Meredith Mullins

A magnet for daredevil activities, the Eiffel Tower also lays claim to the world’s oldest elephant trying to climb the stairs, athletes racing up the stairs on mountain bikes, people descending the stairs via wheelchair, and the inevitable illegal parachuting or bungie jumping from the tower.

The famous French high-wire artist, Philippe Petit, walked from the Palais de Chaillot to the second floor of the tower via tightrope in 1989 (to celebrate the 200thanniversary of the French Revolution).

Group of runners at the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Let the race begin!
© Meredith Mullins

2019: Under Eight Minutes!

This year’s story was no less dramatic. The good news was . . . it wasn’t raining. The bad news was . . . it was cold and the wind was fierce. The top of the Eiffel Tower was swaying.

The race was delayed by 30 minutes as the organizers waited for the wind to subside and debated whether to make this a “race to the middle” rather than a “race to the top.”

Not a chance. La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel is a race about summiting.

Runner #2 climbs the stairs of the Eiffel Tower Vertical at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

It’s all about reaching the top.
© Meredith Mullins

Let the challenge begin.

The race is in time trial format, with a runner in the starting block every 30 or 60 seconds.

Runner checking watch at the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Keeping track of time in the race agains the clock
© Meredith Mullins

Support shouts of “Allez! Allez! Courage!”could be heard at every turn as, one by one, each of the 130 racers did their best to manage their breathing and overcome muscle pain, dizziness, and burning lungs to reach the top—a finish line with a view.

Piotr Lobodzinski, winner of the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical, rounds the corner at one of the most amazing places on earth—the Eiffel Tower. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Men’s winner Piotr Lobodzinski stays strong throughout the race, finishing in under eight minutes.
© Meredith Mullins

The 1st place winners of the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical were Piotr Lobodzinski from Poland (7:53:97) and Suzy Walsham from Australia (10:16:57). Not surprisingly, both are the reigning world champions in tower running. More results can be found here.

ECOTRAILORGA_ANTHONYCHAUMONTEL_VTE2019_Suzy Walsham running in the Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image courtesy of the EcoTrail Organization.)

Suzy Walsham’s focused race brought her another victory.
Photo courtesy of the EcoTrail Organization

They were pleased with their race, given the challenging conditions. And, as Piotr said when he received his award, he hopes, like fine wine, he will just get better with age.

It is certain that more amazing places in the world—the tall ones, especially—will continue to attract these super athletes. Congratulations to all.

The runners of the 2019 Eiffel Tower Vertical race at one of the most amazing places on earth. (Image © Meredith Mullins.)

Congratulations to all!
© Meredith Mullins

For more information about the Eiffel Tower Vertical, visit La Verticale de la Tour Eiffel website, the EcoTrail website, and the Towerrunning World Association website.

 Health Note: Research shows that climbing stairs has significant health benefits. You don’t have to enter The Eiffel Tower Vertical race, but if you take the stairs every now and then, you’ll be the beneficiary.

Comment on this post below, or inspire insight with your own OIC Moment here.

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