单词 | tortoise |
释义 | tortoisen. 1. a. A four-footed reptile of the order Chelonia, in which the trunk is enclosed between a carapace and plastron, formed by the dorsal vertebræ, ribs, and sternum; the skin being covered with large horny plates, commonly called the shell.The Chelonia are usually divided into Land-tortoises (Testudinidæ), Marsh-tortoises (Emydæ), River-tortoises (Trionycidæ), and Marine tortoises (Chelonidæ), in which the feet are compressed into flippers or paddles. The last are now commonly distinguished as turtles; but this name is sometimes extended to species of the Emydæ and Trionycidæ. By some zoologists the name ‘tortoise’ is confined to the terrestrial genus Testudo and its immediate congeners; see also terrapin n.1 ΘΚΠ the world > animals > reptiles > order Chelonia (turtles and tortoises) > [noun] > tortoise or land turtle tortoise1398 shellpad1553 shell-paddock1565 land-turtle1697 land terrapin1709 land-tortoise1774 land chelonian1880 α. Middle English tortuce, tortuge, ( tortuca, 1500s tortuga). β. Middle English tortu, turtu, tortou; 1500s–1600s tortue.c1440 Pallad. on Husb. i. 874 The sedis in a tortous skyn [L. testudinis coreo] thou drie.a1450 Knt. de la Tour (1906) 15 In sayeng youre praiers..be not like the crane or the tortu;..thei are like the crane and the turtu that turnithe her hede and fases bacward, and lokithe ouer the shuldre.1587 L. Mascall Bk. Cattell: Horses (1627) 184 If Sinews or Nerues bee broken or bruised,..Yee shall lay thereon the flesh of a Tortue,..beaten with the powder of Mullenherbe.γ. Middle English tortose, Middle English–1600s tortuse, 1500s -tuous, -tueis, 1600s -tuis, -tus.1484 W. Caxton tr. Subtyl Historyes & Fables Esope ii The..fable..of the tortose and of the other byrdes.1495 Trevisa's Barth. De P.R. (W. de W.) xviii. cviii. gg iv b/1 The londe Tortuse [Bodl. MS. tortuge] dwellyth in houses and in wodes and is clene and good to etynge.1565 T. Cooper Thesaurus at Tegimen The Tortuous, when she is shronke into hir shelle.1590 Tarltons Newes out of Purgatorie 23 Shee that..hath the tortueis vnder hir feet and gads not abroad.1598 B. Yong tr. J. de Montemayor Diana 49 Their shields..were broad shels of monstrous Tortuses.?1608 S. Lennard tr. P. Charron Of Wisdome i. x. 41 In the sense of Hearing, the Hart excelleth all others..; of Feeling, the Tortuis.1651 in F. P. Verney & M. M. Verney Mem. Verney Family 17th Cent. (1904) I. 480 His toilet equipment includes..12 Tortus shell Agendas, 2 gold picktooths.δ. 1500s torteyse, torteaux, 1500s–1600s tortesse, -teise, 1600s tortise, ( -ties).1545 Bibliotheca Eliotæ Chelys, a torteyse.1567 J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 106 The Tortesse is reckned one amongst the Snaile or Wormes.1581 G. Pettie tr. S. Guazzo Ciuile Conuersat. (1586) i. 3 I goe to it as the Torteise to the inchantment.1600 E. de Jonghe's True Declar. Army by Sea 22 There they saw verie great Torteauxes.1600 E. de Jonghe's True Declar. Army by Sea 22 The same day they took a Torteaux.1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 205 The brooke it selfe abounding with Tortesses.1661 R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia Isagoge sig. A5 Having shells; as the Torteise.1661 R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia 124 Tortise. In the deserts of Africa, Lybia, and Mauritania.ε. 1500s–1600s tortoyse, 1500s–1700s -tois, (1500s -toys, 1600s -toisse, turtois), 1500s– tortoise.1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Tortoyse fyshe, chelys.1555 R. Eden tr. Peter Martyr of Angleria Decades of Newe Worlde f. 200v In..Cuba, are founde great Tortoyses (which are certeyne shell fysshes) of such byggenesse that tenne or fyfteene men are scarsely able to lyfte one of them owt of the water. 1569Tortoises [see sense 2a]. 1589 R. Greene Menaphon sig. D2v Venus standeth on the Tortoys, as shewing that Loue creepeth on by degrees.1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. vi. xxii. 131 Tortoisses..so great..that one of their shels will serve to cover an house.1611 Bible (King James) Lev. xi. 29 The Weasell, and the Mouse, and the Tortois, after his kinde. View more context for this quotation1617 Keymis in Raleigh's Apol. 34 I have sent..one roule of Tobacco, one Tortoyse. 1648Turtoises [see sense 1b]. 1666 J. Davies tr. C. de Rochefort Hist. Caribby-Islands 133 There are Land-Tortoises, Sea-Tortoises, and Fresh-water Tortoises, which are of different figures.1699 S. Garth Dispensary ii. 19 And there, the Tortois hung her Coat o' Mail.1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 100 Going down to the Sea-side, I found a large Tortoise or Turtle.1841 T. R. Jones Gen. Outl. Animal Kingdom xxviii. 565 The perfect and typical Reptile, as the Lizard, the Tortoise, and the Serpent, breathes air and air only.1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum xviii. cviii. (Bodl. MS. c 1450) lf. 287 b/1 The tortuge [1495 tortuse] is acounted amonge snailles for he is closed bitwene twey hard schellis..and of tortuca is double kinde þat one woneþ in ryuers & þat oþer in londe. c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 497/2 Tortuce, beest.., tortuca. 1577 J. Frampton tr. N. Monardes Three Bookes ii. f. 73v [Lagartos] take out their yonglynges, as the Tortugas of the sea doeth. 1596 W. Raleigh Discoverie Guiana (new ed.) 54 We found thousands of Tortugas egs, which are very wholesome meate. 1832 W. Macgillivray Trav. & Researches A. von Humboldt xvii. 223 The arraw or tortuga is a large fresh water tortoise.] b. A figure or image of a tortoise. ΘΠ society > communication > representation > a plastic or graphic representation > [noun] > representation of specific things lion?a1366 serpent1388 ray1461 falcon1525 arrow1548 spread eagle1550 hand in hand1583 tortoise1648 turban1687 mouthpiece1832 sun wheel1865 1648 J. Raymond Itinerary Voy. Italy 42 Two Marble Pyramids that stand on brasse Turtoises. 1853 H. N. Humphreys Coin Coll. Man. (1876) iii. 21 The coins of Ægina are easily recognized by the tortoise which is their invariable type. 1897 Westm. Gaz. 22 Apr. 3/3 Two metal tortoises—probably tobacco-jars?..were lying at hand on the table. c. Taken as a type of slowness of motion; hence, applied to a very slow person or thing. ΘΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [noun] > one who or that which moves slowly tortoise1825 1670 G. Havers tr. G. Leti Il Cardinalismo di Santa Chiesa ii. iii. 198 He is slow in his Negotiations, advancing like a Tortoise.] 1825 W. Scott Talisman ix, in Tales Crusaders IV. 190 The speediest horse he had ever mounted was a tortoise in comparison to those of the Arabian sage. 1842 I. Williams Baptistery I. iii. 227 One is travelling with a tortoise by his side. How slowly doth he wend. 2. a. A sort of penthouse, under which besiegers were protected as a tortoise by its shell; = testudo n. 3. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > engine of war > [noun] > movable shed sow1297 mantel1357 snail1408 vinet1408 whelk1408 circlec1440 barbed-cat1489 mantle1489 mantlet1524 vine1565 tortoise1569 sow-guard1582 penthouse1600 penticle1600 target-roof1601 vinea1601 fence-roof1609 testudo1609 cat-house1614 vineyard1650 tortoiseshell1726 manta1829 cat1833 ram-house1850 tortoise-roof1855 bear1865 1569 T. Stocker tr. Diodorus Siculus Hist. Successors Alexander iii. viii. 113/2 He had also many other Engines..and two great and puissaunt Tortoises to helpe them. 1610 W. Folkingham Feudigraphia i. xiii. 45 Battering-Rams, Sowes, Horses, Tortuses. 1796 R. Southey Joan of Arc viii. 159 Tortoises, beneath whose roofing safe, They, filling the deep moat, might for the towers Make fit foundation. 1856 G. Grote Hist. Greece XII. ii. xcii. 129 His soldiers, protected from missiles by moveable penthouses (called Tortoises). b. = testudo n. 3b. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military operations > distribution of troops > formation > [noun] > compact formation > shield-wall or testudo pavisea1460 target-fence1598 pavisade1600 target-roof1601 pavisado1609 tortoiseshella1661 testudoa1680 tortoise1697 shield-wall1880 shield-hedge1892 shield-ring1892 1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 252 Their Targets in a Tortoise cast, the Foes Secure advancing, to the Turrets rose. 1736 tr. C. Rollin Anc. Hist. VIII. 219 They came forward in the form of the testudo or tortoise. 1863 G. J. Whyte-Melville Gladiators 408 He bade them form with their shields the figure that was called ‘the Tortoise’. 3. Short for tortoiseshell n. Usually attributive or as adj. ΘΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > other animal raw materials > [adjective] > made of tortoise-shell tortoiseshell1651 tortoise1702 shell1858 the world > matter > colour > variegation > [adjective] > variegated with specific colours hasweda1325 pied1382 black and white1395 blue and white1551 bauson1587 piebald1743 tortoiseshell1803 testudinarious1826 pepper-and-salta1843 tortoise1902 salt-and-pepper1915 pepper-and-salty1952 1654 D. Osborne Lett. to Sir W. Temple (2002) 183 The ring..is very well only a little of the biggest, send mee a Torto[ise] shell one..that is a little lesse.] 1702 London Gaz. No. 3833/4 A Gold Snuff-Box,..the bottom Tortoise. 1902 Fur & Feather 19 Sept. 232/2 The Young Brindle or Tortoise class [of Cavies]. 4. (With capital initial.) A proprietary name for a type of solid-fuel-burning stove. ΘΠ the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > heating or making hot > that which or one who heats > [noun] > a device for heating or warming > devices for heating buildings, rooms, etc. > stove > types of stove bath-stove1591 pech1591 stewpot1688 kitchen range1733 cockle1775 copper-hole1785 Franklin stove1787 kitchen stove1795 gas stove1818 calefactor1831 thermometer-stove1838 Vesta1843 airtight1844 ship-hearth1858 base-burner1861 wood-stove1875 box1878 tortoise1884 wood-burner1901 Quebec heater1903 pot belly1920 cosy stove1926–7 oil stove1934 paraffin stove1995 1884 Trade Marks Jrnl. 5 Nov. 1025 The Tortoise... Slow combustion stoves. Charles Portway & Son, ‘Tortoise’ Stove Works, and High Street, Halstead, Essex; Stove Manufacturers. 1895 Army & Navy Co-op. Soc. Price List 336 (heading) ‘Tortoise’ heating stoves. 1948 J. Betjeman Few Late Chrysanthemums (1954) 10 The Tortoise stove is lit again. 1981 Country Life 12 Feb. 411/3 (advt.) The old world appeal of the Tortoise Ornamental Stove... Accepts wood, coal or smokeless fuel. Compounds C1. General attributive. a. tortoise broth n. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > dishes and prepared food > soup or pottage > [noun] > turtle-soup turtle-soup1763 turtle1859 tortoise broth1861 1861 R. T. Hulme tr. C. H. Moquin-Tandon Elements Med. Zool. ii. iii. 178 Tortoise broth is prepared from the flesh of the Testudo Græca... Some of the fresh-water tortoises may be substituted. tortoise-feeder n. Π 1855 C. Kingsley Theseus in Heroes ii. 213 Holla, thou tortoise-feeder. tortoise god n. tortoise-heart n. tortoise-myth n. Π 1865 E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind xii. 334 The Tortoise-myths of North America and India. tortoise pond n. b. tortoise-headed adj. Π 1753 J. Parsons in Philos. Trans. 1751–2 (Royal Soc.) 47 120 The tortoise-headed seal. On the shores of many parts of Europe. 1859 J. H. Ingraham Pillar of Fire i. xiii. 223 A tortoise-headed god. tortoise-shaped adj. Π 1826 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. III. xxix. 77 Those singular immovable tortoise-shaped insects. 1911 Archaeologia 62 ii. 523 Tortoise-shaped cores. This is perhaps the most striking group in the enormous series from Northfleet. c. tortoise-fashion adj. Π 1894 A. Beardsley Let. Oct. (1971) 75 The Tannhaüser gets on tortoise fashion but admirably for all that. 1921 W. de la Mare Crossings 71 Ann slowly thrusts her head out of the snow-house, tortoise-fashion. d. tortoise-hours n. ΘΠ the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > too long duration > time that drags tortoise-hours1873 1873 E. J. Brennan Witch of Nemi 163 Fain would I beguile the tortoise-hours. tortoise-pace adj. ΘΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [noun] > slow movement or progress > a slow pace snail's pacea1400 tortoise-pace1690 snail's gallop1707 1690 J. Dryden Don Sebastian iii. i. 52 Thou mov'st a Tortoise pace to my relief. tortoise race n. e. tortoise-footed adj. ΘΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [adjective] > moving slowly slowa1398 slow-movingc1450 slow-bellied1554 lazya1568 slow-footed1587 slow-paced1594 leaden-footed1596 snaily1596 snail-paced1597 dragglinga1599 leaden-heeled1598 ambling1600 slow-foot1607 sluggisha1616 slow-pacing1616 tortoise-paced1623 slow-going1634 leaden-stepping1645 tardigradous1652 tardigrade1656 snail-crawleda1658 dawdling1773 loitering1791–2 slow-stepping1793 creepy1794 lugging1816 tortoise-footed1818 crawling1820 creepy-crawly1858 slowing1877 lead-foot1896 soodling1951 1818 H. H. Milman Samor iv. 83 Thou tortoise-footed sluggard! tortoise-paced adj. ΘΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [adjective] > moving slowly slowa1398 slow-movingc1450 slow-bellied1554 lazya1568 slow-footed1587 slow-paced1594 leaden-footed1596 snaily1596 snail-paced1597 dragglinga1599 leaden-heeled1598 ambling1600 slow-foot1607 sluggisha1616 slow-pacing1616 tortoise-paced1623 slow-going1634 leaden-stepping1645 tardigradous1652 tardigrade1656 snail-crawleda1658 dawdling1773 loitering1791–2 slow-stepping1793 creepy1794 lugging1816 tortoise-footed1818 crawling1820 creepy-crawly1858 slowing1877 lead-foot1896 soodling1951 1623 W. Drummond Cypresse Groue in Flowres of Sion 60 Swift and actiue Pilgrimes come to the end of it in the Morning, or at Noone, which Tortoyse-paced Wretches..scarce..crawle vnto at Midnight. C2. tortoise-beetle n. a leaf-beetle of the family Cassididæ, from the resemblance of the wing-cases and prothorax to the carapace of a tortoise. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Coleoptera or beetles and weevils > [noun] > Polyphaga (omnivorous) > superfamily Phytophaga or Chrysomeloidea > family Chrysomelidae > member of Cassididae (tortoise-beetle) tortoise-beetle1711 1711 J. Petiver Gazophylacii VI. Table LIX Brasil Tortoise Beetle..Its Legs and Body of a golden green, with Copper Edges, it creeps softly, and is slow to fly. 1826 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. III. xxix. 74 Cassida viridis, a tortoise beetle,..covers her group of eggs with a partially transparent membrane. tortoise core n. Archaeology a core (core n.1 5) resembling a tortoise in shape. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > types of tools generally > prehistoric tool > [noun] > types of flintstonec1400 celt1748 fairy hammer1815 axe1851 flint-flake1851 stone-axe1864 flake-knife1865 scraper1865 thumb-flint1865 tool-stone1865 saddle quern1867 fabricator1872 grattoir1872 hammer-stone1872 tribrach1873 flake1875 hand-axe1878 pick1888 turtle-back1890 racloir1892 eolith1895 pebble chopper1895 palaeotalith1897 tranchet1899 point1901 pygmy flint1907 microlith1908 Gravette1911 keeled scraper1911 lissoir1911 coup de poing1912 end-scraper1915 burin1916 rostro-carinate1919 tortoise core1919 blade1921 axe-adze1925 petit tranchet1926 tournette1927 pebble tool1931 raclette1932 biface1934 cleaver1935 thumbnail scraper1937 microblade1959 linguate1966 1919 R. A. Smith in Man July 101 Tortoise-cores have been found on the bank of the ancient river to the south~east. 1972 K. P. Oakley Man the Tool-maker 52 Viewed on its outer face an oval flake thus detached from a tortoise-core has the appearance of a flat, finely worked hand-axe. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Echinodermata > [noun] > division Pelmatozoa > class Crinoidea > fossil or encrinite > member of genus Marsupites tortoise encrinite1808 marsupite1821 1808 J. Parkinson Org. Remains Former World II. xxii. 225 The extraordinary fossil, which, from the disposition of the plates of which it is formed, may be termed the Tortoise Encrinite. tortoise-flower n. a plant of the genus Chelone, from the resemblance of the corolla to the head of a tortoise (also called turtle-head). ΘΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or breeding other animals > [noun] > peg for tethering tortoise tortoise-iron1697 1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World iii. 37 The Moskito-men make their own striking Instruments, as Harpoons, Fish-hooks, and Tortoise-Irons or Pegs. tortoise-lyre n. a lyre made of a tortoiseshell. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > stringed instruments > harp or lyre > [noun] > lyre > other lyres testudo1702 trigon1728 trigonon1728 trigonum1738 phorminx1776 veena1789 tortoise-lyrea1822 kissar1864 nyatiti1964 a1822 P. B. Shelley Homer's Hymn to Mercury xxv, in Posthumous Poems (1824) 303 With his left hand about his knees—the right Held his beloved tortoise-lyre tight. tortoise-plant n. a South African plant, Testudinaria elephantipes, allied to the yam, having a large fleshy root-stock growing above ground, the surface of which becomes deeply cracked so as to suggest the carapace of a tortoise; also called elephant's foot and Hottentot's bread. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > root vegetables > yam > elephant's foot Hottentot bread1731 tortoise-plant1866 1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. Tortoise-plant. tortoise race n. a race in which the last person home wins. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > [noun] > types of race quarter-mile1611 dead1635 diaulos1706 quarter1779 dead heat1796 match race1804 dash1836 sprint race1836 mile1851 road race1852 time trial1857 decider1858 all-ages1864 rough-up1864 hippodrome1867 distance running1868 team race1869 run-off1873 relay race1878 walk-away1879 title race1905 tortoise race1913 procession1937 stage1943 pace1968 prologue1973 1913 Tortoise race [listed in Dict]. 1914 Rowe & Webb Guide to Study of Eng. iii. 126 This is a ‘tortoise’ race, the last man to receive the prize. tortoise-roof n. = sense 2. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > engine of war > [noun] > movable shed sow1297 mantel1357 snail1408 vinet1408 whelk1408 circlec1440 barbed-cat1489 mantle1489 mantlet1524 vine1565 tortoise1569 sow-guard1582 penthouse1600 penticle1600 target-roof1601 vinea1601 fence-roof1609 testudo1609 cat-house1614 vineyard1650 tortoiseshell1726 manta1829 cat1833 ram-house1850 tortoise-roof1855 bear1865 1855 R. C. Singleton tr. Virgil Aeneid ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. I. 288 Leaguered by the tortoise-roof. tortoise-roofed adj. having a roof resembling a tortoiseshell. ΘΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > roof > [adjective] > roofed > in specific manner > specific coupledc1384 thatched1467 stone-heled1578 slate-hung1648 slate-roofed1648 raftered1670 rafted1739 stob-thatched1792 reeded1819 hip-roofed1821 wagon-vaulted1835 span-roofed1842 saddle-backed1853 thatchy1864 tortoise-roofed1886 mansarded1890 monopitch1961 skillion-roofed1967 1886 Pall Mall Gaz. 12 Oct. 4/1 They [Mormons] convene within that hideously ugly, tortoise-roofed building called the Tabernacle. tortoise rotifer n. a rotifer or wheel-animalcule of the family Brachionidæ, having a broad shield-shaped body. tortoise tent n. a kind of tent with a roof shaped like the shell of a tortoise. ΘΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > tent > [noun] > other types of tent tenticle1548 pal1656 marquee1690 gourbi1738 marquise1749 yurt1780 bell-tent1785 kibitka1799 shuldari1808 fly-tent1816 Swiss cottage1820 skin house1826 big tent1843 ridge tent1846 brush tent1862 dog tent1862 shelter tent1862 wall-tent1862 wedge tent1862 pup tent1863 A tent1863 tupik1864 tentlet1879 choom1889 pyramid1889 tortoise tent1890 safari tent1926 tent-sack1940 tent-trailer1963 tepee1970 trailer tent1971 Whillans box1971 1890 Daily News 8 Apr. 3/2 The patients found every care bestowed upon them in the tortoise tent. 1901 Daily Chron. 23 July 3/2 A good case made out for the ‘tortoise’ tent as used by the Portland Hospital. tortoise-tick n. a South African tick, Amblyomma hebræum, parasitic on sheep. Π 1905 Rep. Brit. Assoc. 553 Amblyomma hebræum, commonly known as the tortoise tick. tortoise-wood n. see quot. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > [noun] > woods with specific markings speckle-wood1619 speckled wood1656 pigeon wood?1740 zebrawood1768 snake-wood1843 tiger-wood1858 tortoise-wood1866 zebrano1908 zingana1911 1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. Tortoise-wood, a variety of Zebra-wood. Derivatives tortoise-like adj. ΘΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [adjective] unwinged1613 tortoise-like1645 testudineousa1652 pottering1821 soodly1821 snailish1889 glacial1922 the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > [adverb] slowlyc1384 slowa1398 tortoise-like1645 lently1655 snail-like1825 loiteringly1836 dreichly1844 oozily1871 leadenly1879 snailishly1889 glacially1975 1645 Bp. J. Hall Remedy Discontentm. xxiii. 141 What is this, but Tortoise-like to be clogg'd with a weighty shel? a1649 W. Drummond Poems (1656) 144 Stone-rowling Tay, Tine Tortoise-like that flows. 1804 Gen. Zool. V. 444 Tortoise-shell Tetrodon... The Linnæan name [Tetrodon testudineus] of this fish is supposed to have been given from its tortoise-like beak, but perhaps, with more propriety, from its variegated skin. 1956 P. H. Johnson Last Resort xxiii. 143 His aged, stilted stride, his tortoise-like out-thrusting of the head. 1982 ‘J. Ross’ Death's Head iv. 22 The traffic once more moving, though at a tortoise-like crawl. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1913; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1398 |
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