The 6,537 occurrences of bastard
View the definition of "bastard" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 688 ~ ~ ~
Demicannon ¦ 6 ¦ 5 ¦ 3 ¦ Common cannon; common ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ siege cannon ¦ 7 ¦ 5 ¦ 3-1/2 ¦ Light culverin; common ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ battering cannon ¦ 7 ¦ 5 ¦ 3 ¦ Bastard culverin; ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ legitimate cannon.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,985 ~ ~ ~
They confine themselves to a bastard or vulgar Hebrew, which has little analogy to the original.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,110 ~ ~ ~
Let copulation thrive, for Gloster's bastard son Was kinder to his father than my daughters Got between the lawful sheets; To it luxury, pell-mell, for I lack soldiers.-- Behold yon simpering dame, Whose face between her forks presageth snow; That minceth virtue, and does shake the head To hear of pleasure's name; The fitchew, nor the soiled horse, goes to it With more riotous appetite.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,185 ~ ~ ~
I said, "William, you only formulated in Henry the Fifth Captain MacMorris, a Scotch-Irish bastard-renegade character, who bears about as much relation to a true Irish gentleman as does a shark to a whale, a hawk to an eagle, or a lynx to a lion."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,541 ~ ~ ~
Now, as God lets me live, you'll both suffer for this, and as for you, Tessibel Skinner, look out for that bastard of yours!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,276 ~ ~ ~
It is, unfortunately, quite possible for a boy, or even for a man, to be what is called a "good scholar," and yet to take no interest whatever in the history or literature of Greece and Rome; and the examination system undoubtedly tends to foster this bastard type of humanism.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 632 ~ ~ ~
hev yeou bin to see yar bastard?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,059 ~ ~ ~
That species of bastard door, guarded by two sentry-boxes painted on canvas, at the extremity of Faubourg Saint-Honoré, that is the spot towards which the eyes of the civilized world are now turned with a sort of profound anxiety!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,444 ~ ~ ~
Akre .-A bastard Khatīk.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,765 ~ ~ ~
In Sargūja, Bargāha is used as a title by Ahīrs, while in Rewah the Bargāhs are looked on as the bastard offspring of Baghel Rājpūts.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,210 ~ ~ ~
Chaukhūtia .-A term which signifies a bastard in Chhattīsgarh.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,786 ~ ~ ~
Gāte .-(A bastard.)
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,606 ~ ~ ~
Kharchi .-Bastard Marāthas forming a separate division as distinguished from the Khasi or pure Marāthas.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,000 ~ ~ ~
A bastard kind of Christianity, but a living kind; with a heart-life in it: not dead, chopping barren logic merely!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,566 ~ ~ ~
Christianism, as Dante sings it, is another than Paganism in the rude Norse mind; another than 'Bastard Christianism' half-articulately spoken in the Arab Desert seven-hundred years before!--The noblest _idea_ made _real_ hitherto among men, is sung, and emblemed-forth abidingly, by one of the noblest men.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 805 ~ ~ ~
It is astonishing how immediately wealth brings in, as its companion, meanness: they walk together, and stand together, and kneel together, as the hectoring, prodigal Faulconbridge, the Bastard Plantagenet in _King John_, does with his white-livered, puny brother, Robert.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 416 ~ ~ ~
"For all their bloody talk the bastards couldn't bring it down."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,198 ~ ~ ~
'I am a bastard-brother of thine; This night I am comen for to loose thee.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,248 ~ ~ ~
Thus you would be worth nothing without _Pride_; and little would _Pride_ be worth without _Wantonness_, because bastards are the most numerous and the fiercest subjects, which my daughter _Pride_ possesses in the world.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 320 ~ ~ ~
¶ That thus presumyth agayn vs to rebell ¶ Vertu quod attropes {that} haue he mykyl shame ¶ He is neuer confou{n}ded thus of hy{m} here I tell ¶ A sayd this pluto in dede I know hy{m} wel ¶ He hath ben euer myn vtter ennemye Original has ¶ Wherfore this mater agayn hy{m} take wyll I Ho instead of He ¶ For all the baytes {that} we for hym haue layde ¶ Wythout my helpe be not worth a pere ¶ For though ye all the contrary had sayd ¶ yet wold he brede right nigh your althris ere ¶ No maner of thynge can hym hurt or dere ¶ Saue only a sone of my bastard ¶ Whos name is vice he kepyth my vawarad.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,047 ~ ~ ~
But they call the bastard group of their community Rakhaut Kurmis, and other people speak of all of them as Gabel Kurmis, so that there is no doubt that they belong to the caste.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,383 ~ ~ ~
In Sholapur the Marathas and Kunbis eat together, and the Kunbis are said to be bastard Marathas.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,944 ~ ~ ~
As might be expected, the form of Islam professed by the Meos is of a very bastard order, and Major Powlett's account of it is reproduced in a short separate notice of that tribe.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,706 ~ ~ ~
They have a division of impure blood called the Gate or bastard Naodas, who marry among themselves, and any girl who reaches the age of puberty without being married is relegated to this.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,579 ~ ~ ~
In other cases the illegitimate branch has a special name; thus the Niche Pat Bundelas of Saugor and Chhoti Tar Rajputs of Nimar are the offspring of fathers of the Bundela and other Rajput tribes with women of lower castes; both these terms have the same meaning as Lohri Sen, that is a low-caste or bastard group.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,584 ~ ~ ~
Another class of bastard children of Brahmans are called Dogle, and such people commonly act as servants of Maratha Brahmans; as these Brahmans do not take water to drink from the hands of any caste except their own, they have much difficulty in procuring household servants and readily accept a Dogle in this capacity without too close a scrutiny of his antecedents.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 9,886 ~ ~ ~
The Ghantra Lohars are thus probably of bastard origin, like the groups known as half-castes and others which are frequently found.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 121 ~ ~ ~
Yet, if motherhood be of free choice, of love, of ecstasy, of defiant passion, does it not place a crown of thorns upon an innocent head and carve in letters of blood the hideous epithet, Bastard?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,576 ~ ~ ~
* * * * * The captain of the free Space Viking _Damnthing_ was named Roger-fan-Morvill Esthersan, which meant that he was some Sword-Worlder's acknowledged bastard by a woman of one of the Old Federation planets.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,644 ~ ~ ~
"The Mardukans would; they trade with Tetragrammaton," the acknowledged bastard of somebody named Morvill said.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 40 ~ ~ ~
As discovery is mostly my mania, I have hit upon a bastard-urging to indulge it, by a presenting to the public of certain classics in the nude Roman poetry, like the Arab, and of the same date.... RICHARD F. BURTON.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 790 ~ ~ ~
Thou art Lucína, Juno hight By mothers lien in painful plight, Thou puissant Trivia and the Light 15 Bastard, yclept the Lune.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,680 ~ ~ ~
Soon as had Atys (bastard-she) this lay to comrades sung The Chorus sudden lulliloos with quivering, quavering tongue, Again the nimble timbrel groans, the scooped-out cymbals clash, And up green Ida flits the Choir, with footsteps hurrying rash.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,291 ~ ~ ~
Bastard, n. [bástard] Bastardo, espurio.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,562 ~ ~ ~
Never did Earl that ever wore coronet fly into a pitch of more uncontrollable rage, than did my right honourable father: and in the ardour of his reply, he adopted my mother's phraseology, to inform her, that if there was a whore and bastard connected with his house, it was herself and her brat.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,719 ~ ~ ~
"Talking of the drama, we had a miserable attempt at a sort of bastard theatricals, at Mowbray's rat-gnawed mansion.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,061 ~ ~ ~
"Ay, so called," answered Touchwood; "but by and by he is more likely to prove the Earl of Etherington himself, and t'other fine fellow the bastard."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,444 ~ ~ ~
Other kinds not so rigid, nor the bark, leaf, cone and nuts so large, are those call'd the mountain-pine, a very large stately tree: There is likewise the wild, or bastard-pine, and _tea_, clad with thin long leaves, and bearing a turbinated cone: Abundance of excellent rosin comes from this tree.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 204 ~ ~ ~
Thus far the date of the birth of this Borgia bastard has not been established, and authorities differ.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 827 ~ ~ ~
The high birth of Doña Maria shows what brilliant connections the bastard Giovanni Borgia was able to make as a grandee of Spain, for she was the daughter of Don Enrigo Enriquez, High-Treasurer of Leon, and Doña Maria de Luna, who was closely connected with the royal house of Aragon.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,087 ~ ~ ~
He had served the house of Sforza as secretary and in a diplomatic capacity, and to his eloquence Lucretia's husband, Costanzo's bastard, owed his investiture of the fief of Pesaro by Sixtus IV and Innocent VIII.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,144 ~ ~ ~
Having returned to Rome, Alexander established himself still more firmly in the holy chair, about which he gathered his ambitious bastards, while the Borgias pushed themselves forward all the more audaciously because the confusion occasioned in the affairs of Italy by the invasion of Charles VIII made it all the easier for them to carry out their intentions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,176 ~ ~ ~
If we could see the life which these unrestrained bastards led in the Vatican, where their father, conscious now of his security and greatness, was enthroned, we should indeed behold strange things.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,216 ~ ~ ~
Free from the pedantic opinions of the Germans and the reverence for condition, rank, and birth which they have inherited from the Middle Ages, the Italians, on the other hand, always recognized the force of personality--no matter whether it was that of a bastard or not--but they, nevertheless, were just as likely to become the slaves of the successful.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,154 ~ ~ ~
The duke had found it difficult to overcome his son's objections, for nothing could offend the young prince so deeply as the determination to compel him to marry Lucretia; not because she was an illegitimate child, for this blot signified little in that age when bastards flourished in all Latin countries.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,365 ~ ~ ~
Even a man of his stamp may have blushed for his father, when he thus made him the rival of this bastard for the possession of the property.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,033 ~ ~ ~
Alfonso's young wife must have smiled--if in the excitement of the moment she noticed it--when she found that the noble house of Este had selected such a large number of their bastard daughters to welcome her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,924 ~ ~ ~
The consent of Julius II to the betrothal of his nephew with the bastard daughter of Alexander VI is one of the most astonishing facts in the life of this pope.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 461 ~ ~ ~
In the struggle against Duke Philip Jeanne fought with her usual bravery but with the fatal consciousness that her mission was at an end, and during the defence of Compiègne in the May of 1430 she fell into the power of the Bastard of Vendôme, to be sold by her captor into the hands of the Duke of Burgundy and by the Duke into the hands of the English.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,170 ~ ~ ~
But while the Earl was busy with the French king the Great Bastard of Burgundy crossed to England, and a sumptuous tourney, in which he figured with one of the Woodvilles, hardly veiled the progress of counter-negotiations between Charles and Edward himself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,507 ~ ~ ~
Now, in the wing of the pigeon, or any other bird, the first and fifth digits are wholly aborted; the second is rudimentary, and carries the so-called 'bastard wing;' whilst the third and fourth {182} digits are completely united and enclosed by skin, together forming the extremity of the wing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,412 ~ ~ ~
"You don't mean to insinuate--you dare not say, that I am a bastard?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,420 ~ ~ ~
"What interest can I have in trying to make you a bastard?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,777 ~ ~ ~
It is not Robert Moncton's bare assertion that will make me believe you a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 782 ~ ~ ~
Boards ordinarily sawn from logs are "slash-sawn," i. e., they are tangential or bastard, each cut parallel to the previous one.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,023 ~ ~ ~
Single-Cut Blunt, Flat, Bastard File.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,046 ~ ~ ~
; (3) according to the manner of their serrations, into single cut or "float" (having single, unbroken, parallel, chisel cuts across the surface), double-cut, (having two sets of chisel cuts crossing each other obliquely,) open cut, (having series of parallel cuts, slightly staggered,) and safe edge, (or side,) having one or more uncut surfaces; and (4) according to the fineness of the cut, as rough, bastard, second cut, smooth, and dead smooth.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,231 ~ ~ ~
.10 3 Flat Bastard Files, K. & F., 8", handled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,382 ~ ~ ~
1.80 4 [page 140] Flat Bastard Files, K. & F., 8", handled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,507 ~ ~ ~
.31 1 [page 142] Mill Bastard File, 8", 1 safe edge, handled.}
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,509 ~ ~ ~
1 Square Bastard File, 8", handled.}
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,510 ~ ~ ~
1 Half-round Bastard File, 8", handled.}
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,512 ~ ~ ~
1 Round Bastard File, 4", handled.}
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,099 ~ ~ ~
"Somebody cut the bastard's throat!" he marveled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,297 ~ ~ ~
"Those bastards confiscated all my stuff.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,650 ~ ~ ~
"The bastards!" he snarled.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,651 ~ ~ ~
"The lousy, crummy bastards.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,994 ~ ~ ~
"And my child is a--a--bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,492 ~ ~ ~
Our comfort, in the grip of this tyranny, must lie in the hope that man, who is no bastard child of Mother Nature, may be approaching a more perfect resemblance to her majestic features; that his fitful development will culminate in a spiritual constitution capable of absolute justice.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 36 ~ ~ ~
Sparkling Wines of the Côte d'Or at the Paris Exhibition-- Chambertin, Romanée, and Vougeot-- Burgundy Wines and Vines formerly the Presents of Princes-- Vintaging Sparkling Burgundies-- Their After-Treatment in the Cellars-- Excess of Breakage-- Similarity of Proceeding to that followed in the Champagne-- Principal Manufacturers of Sparkling Burgundies-- Sparkling Wines of Tonnerre, the birthplace of the Chevalier d'Eon-- The Vin d'Arbanne of Bar-sur-Aube-- Death there of the Bastard de Bourbon-- Madame de la Motto's Ostentatious Display and Arrest there-- Sparkling Wines of the Beaujolais-- The Mont-Bronilly Vineyards-- Ancient Reputation of the Wines of the Jura-- The Vin Jaune of Arbois beloved of Henri Quatre-- Rhymes by him in its Honour-- Lons-le-Saulnier-- Vineyards yielding the Sparkling Jura Wines-- Their Vintaging and Subsequent Treatment-- Their High Alcoholic Strength and General Drawbacks 157 XV.--THE SPARKLING WINES OF THE SOUTH OF FRANCE.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,341 ~ ~ ~
Sparkling Wines of the Côte d'Or at the Paris Exhibition-- Chambertin, Romanée, and Vougeot-- Burgundy Wines and Vines formerly the Presents of Princes-- Vintaging Sparkling Burgundies-- Their After-Treatment in the Cellars-- Excess of Breakage-- Similarity of Proceeding to that followed in the Champagne-- Principal Manufacturers of Sparkling Burgundies-- Sparkling Wines of Tonnerre, the birthplace of the Chevalier d'Eon-- The Vin d'Arbanne of Bar-sur-Aube-- Death there of the Bastard de Bourbon-- Madame de la Motte's Ostentatious Display and Arrest there-- Sparkling Wines of the Beaujolais-- The Mont-Brouilly Vineyards-- Ancient Reputation of the Wines of the Jura-- The Vin Jaune of Arbois beloved of Henri Quatre-- Rhymes by him in its Honour-- Lons-le-Saulnier-- Vineyards yielding the Sparkling Jura Wines-- Their Vintaging and Subsequent Treatment-- Their High Alcoholic Strength and General Drawbacks.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,370 ~ ~ ~
It was at Bar-sur-Aube where the Bastard de Bourbon, chief of the sanguinary gang of _écorcheurs_ (flayers), was sewn up in a sack and flung over the parapet of the old stone bridge into the river beneath by order of Charles VII.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,194 ~ ~ ~
_Gui._ Th'art not nobly borne, But bastard to the Cardinall of Ambois.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,817 ~ ~ ~
_Gui._ These are your Machevilian villaines, Your bastard Teucers, that, their mischiefes done, 50 Runne to your shield for shelter; Cacusses That cut their too large murtherous theveries To their dens length still.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,160 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, you scoundrel!" she was on the point of crying, "how can you dishonour your mother in her grave, and deny your own honest birth, merely to pass yourself off as a prince's bastard son?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,173 ~ ~ ~
{Sidenote: _Words in '-ard'_} Neither can I esteem it a mere accident that of a group of depreciatory and contemptuous words ending in 'ard', at least one half should have dropped out of use; I refer to that group of which 'dotard', 'laggard', 'braggard', now spelt 'braggart', 'sluggard', 'buzzard', 'bastard', 'wizard', may be taken as surviving specimens; 'blinkard' (_Homilies_), 'dizzard' (Burton), 'dullard' (Udal), 'musard' (Chaucer), 'trichard' (_Political Songs_), 'shreward' (Robert of Gloucester), 'ballard' (a bald-headed man, Wiclif); 'puggard', 'stinkard' (Ben Jonson), 'haggard', a worthless hawk, as extinct.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,814 ~ ~ ~
Their children were made servants for thirty-one years, a black thus concerned was reduced to slavery for life and the maintenance of the bastard children of women servants was made incumbent upon masters.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,817 ~ ~ ~
[458] As what had been done to prevent the admixture was not sufficient, the Maryland General Assembly took the following action in 1728: "Whereas by the act of assembly relating to servants and slaves, there is no provision made for the punishment of free mulatto women, having bastard children by negroes and other slaves, nor is there any provision made in the said act for the punishment of free negro women, having bastard children by white men; and forasmuch as such copulations are as unnatural and inordinate as between white women and negro men, or other slaves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,818 ~ ~ ~
"_Be it enacted_, That from and after the end of this present session of assembly, that all such free mulatto women, having bastard children, either within or after the time of their service, (_and their issue_,) shall be subject to the same penalties that white women and their issue are, for having mulatto bastards, by the act, entitled, An act relating to servants and slaves.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,819 ~ ~ ~
"_And be it further enacted, by the authority aforesaid, by and with the advice and consent aforesaid_, that from and after the end of this present session of assembly, that all free negro women, having bastard children by white men, (_and their issue_,) shall be subject to the same penalties that white women are, by the act aforesaid, for having bastards by negro men.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,825 ~ ~ ~
If any free English woman should have a bastard child by any Negro or mulatto, she should pay the sum of fifteen pounds sterling, within one month after such bastard child should be born, to the church wardens of the parish where she should be delivered of such child, and in default of such payment she should be taken into the possession of the said church wardens and disposed of for five years, and such bastard child should be bound out as a servant by the church wardens until he or she should attain the age of thirty years, and in case such English woman that should have such bastard child be a servant, she should be sold by the church wardens (after her time is expired that she ought by law to serve her master) for five years, and the money she should be sold for divided as before appointed, and the child should serve as aforesaid.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,826 ~ ~ ~
[461] It was further provided in 1753 that if any woman servant should have a bastard child by a Negro or mulatto, over and above the year's service due to her master or owner, she should immediately upon the expiration of her time, to her then present master, or owner, pay down to the church wardens of the parish wherein such child should be born for the use of the said parish, fifteen pounds current money of Virginia, or be sold for five years to the use aforesaid; and if a free Christian white woman should have such bastard child by a Negro, or mulatto, for every such offence, she should within one month after her delivery of such bastard child, pay to the church wardens for the time being, of the parish wherein such child should be born, for the use of the said parish, fifteen pounds current money of Virginia, or be by them sold for five years to the use aforesaid; and in both the said cases, the church wardens should bind the said child to be a servant until it should be of thirty-one years of age.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,853 ~ ~ ~
"David Lewis Constable of Haverford Returned a Negro man of his And a white woman for having a Bastard Childe ... the Negroe said she Intised him and promised him to marry him: she being examined, Confest the same: the Court ordered that she shall receive Twenty one lashes on her bare Backe ... and the Court ordered the negroe never more to meddle with any white woman more uppon paine of his life.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 826 ~ ~ ~
Certainly it must have been a happy moment for the neglected {67} bastard who had been a swineherd to return to his native village under such enviable conditions.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 299 ~ ~ ~
King Robert's bastard son, Sir Robert Bruce, had a grant of the lands of Finhaven, in the neighbourhood of Rostinoth.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,407 ~ ~ ~
The modern buildings have, in some instances, followed out the same style, eminently suitable for the country, but others have adopted a bastard and incongruous so-called "modern" type, copied from similar structures in Europe or the United States, where pure utility of interior has been clothed with undignified exterior of commercial character, marking a certain spirit of transition in its inhabitants.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,594 ~ ~ ~
It wasn't enough Bonaday should get the best rooms in S. Hospital but now you give him leave for this child which every one in S. Hospital knows is a bastard.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,568 ~ ~ ~
Our friends are sanguine as to the event of Bastard's motion, which is to come on to day.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,602 ~ ~ ~
My dear Brother, Bastard's motion came on yesterday, and was lost, on the previous question, by 221 to 169.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,811 ~ ~ ~
Our cousin of Northumberland, has, I think, decidedly joined the independent party under the auspices of Lord Rawdon and Bastard, and in consequence of this has refused to re-elect Rose.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 831 ~ ~ ~
(200) Jerome Heydon, described as an "iremonger at the lower end of Cheapeside," was ready to sell corslets, comprising "brest, backe, gorgett, taces and headpeece," at 15_s._; pikes with steel heads at 2_s._ 6_d._; swords, being Turkey blades, at 7_s._; "bastard" muskets at 14_s._; great muskets, with rests, at 16_s._; a headpiece, lined and stringed, at 2_s._ 6_d._, and a bandaleer for 1_s._ 6_d._ Henry White and Don Sany Southwell were prepared to do corslets 6_d._ cheaper, and the same with swords, but their swords are described as only "Irish hilts and belts to them."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 832 ~ ~ ~
Their bastard muskets, "with mouldes," could be had for 13_s._, or 1_s._ cheaper than those of Jerome Heydon.
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