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篇1:本月阅读模拟题
本月阅读模拟题
阅读下面文字,完成后面的题目>.(12分,每小题3分) 月球表面岩石的奥秘 萧华 在美国的'阿波罗登月计划中,宇航员们先后从月球表面带回超过440千克的岩石样品,但这些样品的许多特性却让科学家们一直迷惑不解.
作 者:肖阳 作者单位:华中师大一附中 刊 名:语文教学与研究(学生版) 英文刊名:THE LANGUAGE TEACHER'S FRIEND 年,卷(期): “”(4) 分类号: 关键词:篇2:雅思阅读模拟题
Part I
Reading Passage 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-14 which are based on
Reading Passage 1 below.
Next Year Marks the EU's 50th Anniversary of the Treaty
A.
After a period of introversion and stunned self-disbelief, continental
European governments will recover their enthusiasm for pan-European
institution-building in . Whether the European public will welcome a return
to what voters in two countries had rejected so short a time before is another
matter.
B.
There are several reasons for Europe’s recovering self-confidence. For
years European economies had been lagging dismally behind America (to say
nothing of Asia), but in the large continental economies had one of their
best years for a decade, briefly outstripping America in terms of growth. Since
politics often reacts to economic change with a lag, 2006’s improvement in
economic growth will have its impact in 2007, though the recovery may be ebbing
by then.
C.
The coming year also marks a particular point in a political cycle so
regular that it almost seems to amount to a natural law. Every four or five
years, European countries take a large stride towards further integration by
signing a new treaty: the Maastricht treaty in 1992, the Treaty of Amsterdam in
, the Treaty of Nice in . And in they were supposed to ratify a
European constitution, laying the ground for yet more integration—until the calm
rhythm was rudely shattered by French and Dutch voters. But the political
impetus to sign something every four or five years has only been interrupted,
not immobilised, by this setback.
D.
In 2007 the European Union marks the 50th anniversary of another treaty—the
Treaty of Rome, its founding charter. Government leaders have already agreed to
celebrate it ceremoniously, restating their commitment to “ever closer union”
and the basic ideals of European unity. By itself, and in normal circumstances,
the EU’s 50th-birthday greeting to itself would be fairly meaningless, a routine
expression of European good fellowship. But it does not take a Machiavelli to
spot that once governments have signed the declaration (and it seems unlikely
anyone would be so uncollegiate as to veto it) they will already be halfway
towards committing themselves to a new treaty. All that will be necessary will
be to incorporate the 50th-anniversary declaration into a new treaty containing
a number of institutional and other reforms extracted from the failed attempt at
constitution-building and—hey presto—a new quasi-constitution will be ready.
E.
According to the German government—which holds the EU’s agenda-setting
presidency during the first half of 2007—there will be a new draft of a
slimmed-down constitution ready by the middle of the year, perhaps to put to
voters, perhaps not. There would then be a couple of years in which it will be
discussed, approved by parliaments and, perhaps, put to voters if that is deemed
unavoidable. Then, according to bureaucratic planners in Brussels and Berlin,
blithely ignoring the possibility of public rejection, the whole thing will be
signed, sealed and a new constitution delivered in 2009-10. Europe will be
nicely back on schedule. Its four-to-five-year cycle of integration will have
missed only one beat.
F.
The resurrection of the European constitution will be made more likely in
2007 because of what is happening in national capitals. The European Union is
not really an autonomous organisation. If it functions, it is because the
leaders of the big continental countries want it to, reckoning that an active
European policy will help them get done what they want to do in their own
countries.
G.
That did not happen in 2005-06. Defensive, cynical and self-destructive,
the leaders of the three largest euro-zone countries—France, Italy and
Germany—were stumbling towards their unlamented ends. They saw no reason to
pursue any sort of European policy and the EU, as a result, barely functioned.
But by the middle of 2007 all three will have gone, and this fact alone will
transform the European political landscape.
H.
The upshot is that the politics of the three large continental countries,
bureaucratic momentum and the economics of recovery will all be aligned to give
a push towards integration in 2007. That does not mean the momentum will be
irresistible or even popular. The British government, for one, will almost
certainly not want to go with the flow, beginning yet another chapter in the
long history of confrontation between Britain and the rest of Europe. More
important, the voters will want a say. They rejected the constitution in 2005.
It would be foolish to assume they will accept it after 2007 just as a result of
an artful bit of tinkering.
篇3:雅思阅读模拟题
Sleep medication linked to bizarre behaviour
12:44 06 February 2007
NewScientist.com news service
Roxanne Khamsi
New evidence has linked a commonly prescribed sleep medication with bizarre
behaviours, including a case in which a woman painted her front door in her
sleep.
UK and Australian health agencies have released information about 240 cases
of odd occurrences, including sleepwalking, amnesia and hallucinations among
people taking the drug zolpidem.
While doctors say that zolpidem can offer much-needed relief for people
with sleep disorders, they caution that these newly reported cases should prompt
a closer look at its possible side effects.
Zolpidem, sold under the brand names Ambien, Stilnoct and Stilnox, is
widely prescribed to treat insomnia and other disorders such as sleep apnea.
Various forms of the drug, made by French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi-Aventis,
were prescribed 674,500 times in 2005 in the UK.
A newly published report from Australia’s Federal Health Department
describes 104 cases of hallucinations and 62 cases of amnesia experienced by
people taking zolpidem since marketing of the drug began there in . The
health department report also mentioned 16 cases of strange sleepwalking by
people taking the medication.
Midnight snack
In one of these sleepwalking cases a patient woke with a paintbrush in her
hand after painting the front door to her house. Another case involved a woman
who gained 23 kilograms over seven months while taking zolpidem. “It was only
when she was discovered in front of an open refrigerator while asleep that the
problem was resolved,” according to the report.
The UK’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, meanwhile,
has recorded 68 cases of adverse reactions to zolpidem from 2001 to 2005.
The newly reported cases in the UK and Australia add to a growing list of
bizarre sleepwalking episodes linked to the drug in other countries, including
reports of people sleep-driving while on the medication. In one case, a
transatlantic flight had to be diverted after a passenger caused havoc after
taking zolpidem.
Hypnotic effects
There is no biological pathway that has been proven to connect zolpidem
with these behaviours. The drug is a benzodiazepine-like hypnotic that promotes
deep sleep by interacting with brain receptors for a chemical called
gamma-aminobutyric acid. While parts of the brain become less active during deep
sleep, the body can still move, making sleepwalking a possibility.
The product information for prescribers advises that psychiatric adverse
effects, including hallucinations, sleepwalking and nightmares, are more likely
in the elderly, and treatment should be stopped if they occur.
Patient advocacy groups say they would like government health agencies and
drug companies to take a closer look at the possible risks associated with sleep
medicines. They stress that strange sleepwalking and sleep-driving behaviours
can have risky consequences.
“When people do something in which they’re not in full control it’s always
a danger,” says Vera Sharav of the New York-based Alliance for Human Research
Protection, a US network that advocates responsible and ethical medical research
practices.
Tried and tested
“The more reports that come out about the potential side effects of the
drug, the more research needs to be done to understand if these are real side
effects,” says sleep researcher Kenneth Wright at the University of Colorado in
Boulder, US.
Millions of people have taken the drug without experiencing any strange
side effects, points out Richard Millman at Brown Medical School, director of
the Sleep Disorders Center of Lifespan Hospitals in Providence, Rhode Island,
US. He says that unlike older types of sleep medications, zolpidem does not
carry as great a risk of addiction.
And Wright notes that some of the reports of “sleep-driving” linked to
zolpidem can be easily explained: some patients have wrongly taken the drug
right before leaving work in hopes that the medicine will kick in by the time
they reach home. Doctors stress that the medication should be taken just before
going to bed.
The US Food & Drug Administration says it is continuing to “actively
investigate” and collect information about cases linking zolpidem to unusual
side effects.
The Ambien label currently lists strange behaviour as a “special concern”
for people taking the drug. “It’s a possible rare adverse event,” says
Sanofi-Aventis spokesperson Melissa Feltmann, adding that the strange
sleepwalking behaviours “may not necessarily be caused by the drug” but instead
result from an underlying disorder. She says that “the safety profile [of
zolpidem] is well established”. The drug received approval in the US in
1993.
雅思阅读模拟题:Food agency takes on industry
Food agency takes on industry over junk labels
Felicity Lawrence
Thursday December 28, 2006
The Guardian
1. Consumers are to be presented with two rival new year advertising
campaigns as the Food Standards Agency goes public in its battle with the
industry over the labelling of unhealthy foods.
2. The Guardian has learned that the FSA will launch a series of 10-second
television adverts in January telling shoppers how to follow a red, amber and
green traffic light labelling system on the front of food packs, which is
designed to tackle Britain's obesity epidemic.
3. The campaign is a direct response to a concerted attempt by leading food
manufacturers and retailers, including Kellogg's and Tesco, to derail the
system. The industry fears that traffic lights would demonise entire categories
of foods and could seriously damage the market for those that are fatty, salty
or high in sugar.
4. The UK market for breakfast cereals is worth £1.27bn a year and the
manufacturers fear it will be severely dented if red light labels are put on
packaging drawing attention to the fact that the majority are high in salt
and/or sugar.
5. The industry is planning a major marketing campaign for a competing
labelling system which avoids colour-coding in favour of information about the
percentage of “guideline daily amounts” (GDAs) of fat, salt and sugar contained
in their products.
6. The battle for the nation's diet comes as new rules on television
advertising come into force in January which will bar adverts for unhealthy
foods from commercial breaks during programmes aimed at children. Sources at the
TV regulators are braced for a legal challenge from the industry and have
described the lobbying efforts to block any new ad ban or colour-coded labelling
as “the most ferocious we've ever experienced”.
7. Ofcom's chief executive, Ed Richards, said: “We are prepared to face up
to any legal action from the industry, but we very much hope it will not be
necessary.” The FSA said it was expecting an onslaught from the industry in
January. Senior FSA officials said the manufacturers' efforts to undermine its
proposals on labelling could threaten the agency's credibility.
8. Terrence Collis, FSA director of communications, dismissed claims that
the proposals were not based on science. “We have some of the most respected
scientists in Europe, both within the FSA and in our independent advisory
committees. It is unjustified and nonsensical to attack the FSA's scientific
reputation and to try to undermine its credibility.”
9. The FSA is understood to have briefed its ad agency, United, before
Christmas, and will aim to air ads that are “non-confrontational, humorous and
factual” as a counterweight to industry's efforts about the same time. The
agency, however, will have a tiny fraction of the budget available to the
industry.
10. Gavin Neath, chairman of Unilever UK and president of the Food and
Drink Federation, has said that the industry has made enormous progress but
could not accept red “stop” signs on its food.
11. Alastair Sykes, chief executive of Nestlé UK, said that under the FSA
proposals all his company's confectionery and most of its cereals would score a
red. “Are we saying people shouldn't eat confectionery? We're driven by
consumers and what they want, and much of what we do has been to make our
products healthier,” he said.
12. Chris Wermann, director of communications at Kellogg's, said: “In
principle we could never accept traffic light labelling.”
13. The rival labelling scheme introduced by Kellogg's, Danone, Unilever,
Nestlé, Kraft and Tesco and now favoured by 21 manufacturers, uses an
industry-devised system based on identifying GDAs of key nutrients. Tesco says
it has tested both traffic lights and GDA labels in its stores and that the
latter increased sales of healthier foods.
14. But the FSA said it could not live with this GDA system alone because
it was “not scientific” or easy for shoppers to understand at a glance.
篇4:雅思阅读经典模拟题
雅思阅读经典模拟题
Part Ⅲ Reading Tasks
True/False/Not Given Exercises
Unit2
When was the last time you saw a frog? Chances are, if you live in a city, you have not seen one for some time. Even in wet areas once teeming with frogs and toads, it is becoming less and less easy to find those slimy, hopping and sometimes poisonous members of the animal kingdom. All over the world, and even in remote parts of Australia, frogs are losing the ecological battle for survival, and biologists are at a loss to explain their demise. Are amphibians simply oversensitive to changes in the ecosystem? Could it be that their rapid decline in numbers is signaling some coming environmental disaster for us all? This frightening scenario is in part the consequence of a dramatic increase over the last quarter century in the development of once natural areas of wet marshland; home not only to frogs but to all manner of wildlife. However, as yet, there are no obvious reasons why certain frog species are disappearing from rainforests in Australia that have barely been touched by human hand. The mystery is unsettling to say the least, for it is known that amphibian species are extremely sensitive to environmental variations in temperature and moisture levels. The danger is that planet Earth might not only lose a vital link in the ecological food chain (frogs keep populations of otherwise pestilent insects at manageable levels), but we might be increasing our output of air pollutants to levels that may have already become irreversible. Frogs could be inadvertently warning us of a catastrophe.??
An example of a species of frog that, at far as is known, has become extinct, is the platypus frog. Like the well-known Australian mammal it was named after, it exhibited some very strange behaviour; instead of giving birth to tadpoles in the wate
>>篇5:阅读模拟题(十二)
阅读模拟题(十二)
一、阅读下面的文字,完成1-4题.(12分,每小题3分) 10月24目18时5分,我国在西昌卫星发射中心用长征三号甲运载火箭将嫦娥一号卫星成功送入太空.
作 者:朱良松 作者单位: 刊 名:语文教学与研究(学生版) 英文刊名:THE LANGUAGE TEACHER'S FRIEND 年,卷(期): “”(12) 分类号: 关键词:篇6:雅思阅读经典模拟题
Part Ⅲ Reading Tasks
True/False/Not Given Exercises
Unit2
When was the last time you saw a frog? Chances are, if you live in a city, you have not seen one for some time. Even in wet areas once teeming with frogs and toads, it is becoming less and less easy to find those slimy, hopping and sometimes poisonous members of the animal kingdom. All over the world, and even in remote parts of Australia, frogs are losing the ecological battle for survival, and biologists are at a loss to explain their demise. Are amphibians simply oversensitive to changes in the ecosystem? Could it be that their rapid decline in numbers is signaling some coming environmental disaster for us all? This frightening scenario is in part the consequence of a dramatic increase over the last quarter century in the development of once natural areas of wet marshland; home not only to frogs but to all manner of wildlife. However, as yet, there are no obvious reasons why certain frog species are disappearing from rainforests in Australia that have barely
been touched by human hand. The mystery is unsettling to say the least, for it is known that amphibian species are extremely sensitive to environmental variations in temperature and moisture levels. The danger is that planet Earth might not only lose a vital link in the ecological food chain (frogs keep populations of otherwise pestilent insects at manageable levels), but we might be increasing our output of air pollutants to levels that may have already become irreversible. Frogs could be inadvertently warning us of a catastrophe.お
An example of a species of frog that, at far as is known, has become extinct, is the platypus frog. Like the well-known Australian mammal it was named after, it exhibited some very strange behaviour; instead of giving birth to tadpoles in the water, it raised its young within its stomach. The baby frogs were actually born from out of their mother s mouth. Discovered in 1981, less than ten years later the frog had completely vanished from the crystal clear waters of Booloumba Creek near Queensland s Sunshine Coast. Unfortunately, this freak of nature is not the only frog species to have been lost in Australia. Since the 1970s, no less than eight others have suffered the same fate.
One theory that seems to fit the facts concerns the depletion of the ozone layer, a well documented phenomenon which has led to a sharp increase in ultraviolet radiation levels.The ozone layer is meant to shield the Earth from UV rays, but increased radiation may be having a greater effect upon frog populations than previously believed. Another theory is that worldwide temperature increases are upsetting the breeding cycles of frogs.
TRUE/FALSE/NOT GIVEN
1.Frogs are disappearing only from city areas.
2.Frogs and toads are usually poisonous.
3.Biologists are unable to explain why frogs are dying.
4.The frogs natural habitat is becoming more and more developed.
5.Attempts are being made to halt the development of wet marshland.
6.Frogs are important in the ecosystem because they control pests.
7.The platypus frog became extinct by 1991.
8.Frogs usually give birth to their young in an underwater nest.
9.Eight frog species have become extinct so far in Australia.
10.There is convincing evidence that the ozone layer is being depleted.
11.It is a fact that frogs breeding cycles are upset by worldwide in creases in temperature.
Practice 3
Almost everyone with or without a computer is aware of the latest technological revolution destined to change forever the way in which humans communicate, namely, the Information Superhighway, best exemplified by the ubiquitous Internet. Already, millions of people around the world are linked by computer simply by having a modem and an address on the `Net , in much the same way that owning a telephone links us to almost anyone who pays a phone bill. In fact, since the computer connections are made via the phone line, the Internet can be envisaged as a network of visual telephone links. It remains to seen in which direction the Information Superhighway is headed, but many believeit is the educational hope of the future.
The World Wide Web, an enormous collection of Internet addresses or sites, all of which can be accessed for information, has been mainly responsible for the increase in interest in the Internet in the 1990s. Before the World Wide Web, the `Net was comparable to an integrated collection of computerized typewriters, but the introduction of the `Web in 1990 allowed not only text links to be made but also graphs, images and even video.
A Web site consists of a `home page , the first screen of a particular site on the computer to which you are connected, from where access can be had to other subject related `pages (or screens) at the site and on thousands of other computers all over the world. This is a
chieved by a process called `hypertext . By clicking with a mouse device on various parts of the screen, a person connected to the `Net can go traveling, or surfing through a of the screen, a person connected to the `Net can go traveling, or `surfing through a web of pages to locate whatever information is required.
Anyone can set up a site; promoting your club, your institution, your company s products or simply yourself, is what the Web and the Internet is all about. And what is more, information on the Internet is not owned or controlled by any one organization. It is, perhaps, true to say that no one and therefore everyone owns the `Net . Because of the relative freedom of access to information, the Internet has often been criticised by the media as a potentially hazardous tool in the hands of young computer users. This perception has proved to be largely false however, and the vast majority of users both young and old get connected with the Internet for the dual purposes for which it was intended - discovery and delight.
TRUE/FALSE/NOT GIVEN
1.Everyone is aware of the Information Superhighway.
2.Using the Internet costs the owner of a telephone extra money.
3.Internet computer connections are made by using telephone lines.
4.The World Wide Web is a network of computerised typewriters.
5.According to the author, the Information Superhighway may be the future hope of education.
6.The process called`hypertext requires the use of a mouse device.
7.The Internet was created in the 1990s.
8.The `home page is the first screen of a `Web site on the `Net .
9.The media has often criticised the Internet because it is dangerous.
10. The latest technological revolution will change the way humans communicate.
Practice 4
The Australian political scene is dominated by two major parties that have quite different political agendas. However, the policies of the Australian Labor Party and the Liberal Party have become much more difficult to tell apart in recent years. In fact, it would be true to say that both parties consist of conservative, moderate and radical elements, and therefore the general public is often perplexed about which party to vote for. Nonetheless, it is usual to find that an Australian will lean towards supporting one of these two parties and remain faithful to that party for life.
The Labor Party was formed early in the twentieth century to safeguard the interests of the common working man and to give the trade unions political representation in Parliament. The Party has always had strong connections with the unions, and supports the concept of a welfare society in which people who are less fortunate than others are financially, and otherwise, assisted in their quest for a more equitable slice of the economic pie. The problem is that such socialist political agendas are extremely expensive to implement and maintain, especially in a country that, although comparatively wealthy, is vast and with a small working and hence taxpaying population base. Welfare societies tend towards bankruptcy unless government spending is kept in check. The Liberal Party, on the other hand, argues that the best way to ensure a
fair division of wealth in the country is to allow more freedom to create it.This, in turn, means more opportunities, jobs created etc., and therefore more wealth available to all. Just how the poor are to share in the distribution of this wealth (beyond being given, at least in theory, the opportunity to create it) is, however, less well understood. Practice, of course, may make nonsense of even the best theoretical intentions, and often the less politically powerful are badly catered for under governments implementing free-for-all policies.
It is no wonder that given the two major choices offered them, Australian voters are increasingly turning their attention to the smaller political parties, which claim to offer a more balanced swag of policies, often based around one major current issue. Thus, for instance, at the last election there was the No Aircraft Noise Parry, popular in city areas, and the Green Party, which is almost solely concerned with environmental issues.
篇7:文言文阅读理解模拟题
文言文阅读理解模拟题
元绛,字厚之,其先临川危氏。唐末,曾祖仔倡聚众保乡里,进据信州,为杨氏所败,奔杭州,易姓曰元。祖德昭,仕吴越至丞相,遂为钱塘人。绛生而敏悟,五岁能作诗,九岁谒荆南太守,上诸朝,贫不能行。长,举进士,以廷试误赋韵,得学究出身。
再举登第,调江宁推官,摄上元令。民有号王豹子者,豪占人田,略男女为仆妾,有欲告者,则杀以灭口。绛捕置于法。甲与乙被酒相殴击,甲归卧,夜为人断足。妻称乙,告里长,执乙诣县,而甲已死。绛敕其妻曰:归治而夫丧,乙已伏矣。阴使信谨吏迹其后,望一僧迎笑,切切私语。绛命取僧系庑下,诘妻奸状,即吐实。人问其故,绛曰:吾见妻哭不哀,且与伤者共席而襦无血污,是以知之。
安抚使范仲淹表其材,知永新县。豪子龙聿诱少年周整饮博,以技胜之,计其赀折取上腴田,立券。久而整母始知之,讼于县,县索券为证,则母手印存,弗受。又讼于州,至击登闻鼓,皆不得直。绛至,母又来诉,绛视券,呼谓聿曰:券年月居印上,是必得周母他牍尾印,而撰伪券续之耳。聿骇谢,即日归整田。
绛为官精明,然不苛暴。知通州海门县,淮民多盗贩盐,制置使建言,满二十斤者皆坐徒。绛曰:海滨之人,恃盐以为命,非群贩比也。笞而纵之。擢江西转运判官、知台州。州大水冒城,民庐荡析。绛出库钱,即其处作室数千区,命人自占,与期三岁偿费,流移者皆复业。又甓其城,因门为闸,以御湍涨。后人守其法。
后绛入为翰林学士、知开封府,寻拜三司使、参知政事。绛所至有威名,工于文辞,为流辈推许。虽在中书,而蕃夷书诏,犹多出其手。数请老,神宗命其子耆宁校书崇文院,慰留之。既得谢,帝眷眷命之曰:卿可营居京师,朕当资币金,且便耆年仕进。绛曰:臣有田庐在吴,乞归鬻之,即筑室都城,得望属车之尘,幸矣。敢冀赐邪?既行,追赍白金千两,敕以蚤还。绛至吴逾岁,以老病奏,恐不能奉诏。三年而薨,年七十六。赠太子少师,谥曰章简。
4.对下列句子中加点的词的解释,不正确的一项是()
A.绛命取僧系庑下系:捆绑
B.豪子龙聿诱少年周整饮博博:斗殴
C.因门为闸,以御湍涨因:利用
D.寻拜三司使、参知政事寻:不久
5.以下各组句子中,分别表明元绛为官精明和不苛暴的一组是()
A.绛敕其妻曰:归治而夫丧,乙已伏矣。
绛曰:海滨之人,恃盐以为命,非群贩比也。
B.绛曰:吾见妻哭不哀,且与伤者共席而襦无血污,是以知之。
县索券为证,则母手印存,弗受。
C. 绛捕置于法。
即其处作室数千区,命人自占,与期三岁偿费
D. 以技胜之,计其赀折取上腴田,立券。
既行,追赍白金千两
6.下列对原文有关内容的分析和概括,不正确的一项是()
A.元绛的祖先本来不姓元,唐代末年,元绛曾祖父曾经为保卫乡里聚集众人,进入并据有了信州,后被杨氏打败,逃奔到杭州,改姓元。祖父在吴越做官,于是成为钱塘人。
B.元绛任江宁推官时,上元县有甲乙二人酒醉后打架,甲夜里被人砍死了。甲的妻子说是乙砍的',告到里长那里,又抓着乙去到县衙。元绛最终查明真相,惩治了真凶。
C.元绛任台州知府时,有一次台州城外发大水,百姓的房屋被冲倒。元绛就用砖头砌高城墙,利用城门作为水闸,用以抵御湍急暴涨的水流,后来的台州官员也都沿用这一方法。
D.元绛不论在哪里做官都有很好的名声,并且擅长文辞,被当时的人推重赞赏。即使后来在内廷中任职,皇帝给蕃夷的诏书,大多出自他的手笔。
7.把文言文阅读材料中画线的句子翻译成现代汉语。(10分)
(1)绛敕其妻曰:归治而夫丧,乙已伏矣。阴使信谨史迹其后,望一僧迎笑,切切私语。
(2)臣有田庐在吴,乞归鬻之,即筑室都城,得望属车之尘,幸矣。敢冀赐邪?
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