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Concordance index for 'eng' onwards
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[Go to the Concordance Main Index]
:eng :engage :engaged :Engagement-Announcement :Engastrimyth :Engel :Engelbart :Engelse :engine :engineer :engineered :engineering :engineers :enginer :engines :Engkent :Engl :ENGL-SL :ENGLAND :England
- AWWY: awarding of the flitch (bringing home the bacon); bacon, saving our; bring home the bacon; Dunmow, Essex, England (bringing home the bacon); flitch, awarding of the (bringing home the bacon); Save and Bring Home the Bacon: 1
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 2
- Audio:
The Rainbow Passage
: 1
- Audio:
Arthur the Rat
: 1
- Audio:
Bother, father caught...
: 1
- Audio:
Credits
: 2
- Audio:
The North Wind and The Sun
: 1
- Audio:
I teach Ferdinand
: 1
- Audio: AUE: The Audio Archive: 5
- FX: "God rest you merry, gentlemen": 1
- FX: "The exception proves the rule.": 2
- FX: "billion": a U.K. view: 1
- FX: "bloody": 2
- FX: "by hook or by crook": 1
- FX: "quality": 1
- FX: "scot-free": 1
- FX: "shall" vs "will", "should" vs "would": 1
- FX: "sirloin"/"baron of beef": 1
- FX: "whole cloth": 1
- FX: How do Americans pronounce "dog"?: 1
- FX: Why is "I" capitalized?: 2
- FX: Words whose spelling has influenced their pronunciation: 1
- Groups: AUE: "company is" and "company are": 1
- IPA I:
Speakers
: 1
- Intro B:
Audio Archives
: 1
- Intro B:
British English
: 1
- Intro C:
England, Britain, Great Britain, United Kingdom, etc.
: 1
- Intro C: AUE Intro C: Mini-FAQ on Words & Phrases: 1
- Isles:
BRITAIN. The informal name for the United
: 1
- Isles:
GREAT BRITAIN. Used by cartographers to denote the biggest
: 2
- Isles:
THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND.
: 1
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 1
- Lawler: Object Complements: 1
- Quinion: Legal language in England: 1
- Supp: AUE FAQ Supplement: 1
- UCLE04: Our Favourite Cultural and Language Links
: 2
- UCLE05: What’s
: 1
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 2
- UCLE09: Holidays
: 2
- UCLE12: News
: 1
- What's new?:
24 January 2002
: 1
- Yaelf: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 1
- Yaelf: What is the origin of "lie back and think of England"? "close your eyes and think of England"?: 2
- 1. England
: 3
- 11. The Commonwealth
: 9
- 2. England and Wales
: 4
- 3. Great Britain
: 1
- 5. The United Kingdom and Islands
: 3
- A ucle resource page: 1
- A ucle resource page: 1
- AUE Gallery: Stephen Toogood: 1
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 2
- AUE: Thou, Thee, and Archaic Grammar: 1
- AUE: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 10
- Cambodunum
: 1
- Preface
: 9
:England-New :Englander :Englightenment :Engliscan :ENGLISH :english
- AUE Logo: The Totally Official alt.usage.english Logo: 8
- AWWY: bobby (slang for English policemen); captive and cap; copping a plea or feel; fuzz (slang for policeman); gendarme (slang for French policemen); giving lip; Judas kiss; K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid); kiss and tell; kiss of death; Read My Lips; lip service, paying; lip, giving; loose lips sink ships; paying lip service; ships, loose lips sink; sink ships, loose lips: 1
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 8
- Abbreviations: AUE: Initialisms Commonly Used in alt.usage.english: 45
- Audio:
Credits
: 1
- Audio:
Other Sound Files
: 1
- Audio: AUE: The Audio Archive: 1
- Cunningham: Explanatory Remarks: 10
- Cunningham: History of posting volume to AUE and AEU: 2
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 2
- Cunningham: Multiple IDs: : 5
- Emphasis quotes: AUE: Use of Quotation Marks for Emphasis: 2
- FX: "-er" vs "-re": 1
- FX: "." after abbreviations: 1
- FX: "A.D.": 1
- FX: "Break a leg!": 1
- FX: "Caesarean section": 1
- FX: "Go figure": 3
- FX: "God rest you merry, gentlemen": 2
- FX: "I won't mention...": 1
- FX: "ISO": 1
- FX: "Illegitimis non carborundum": 1
- FX: "It needs cleaned": 1
- FX: "It's me" vs "It is I": 6
- FX: "O.K.": 5
- FX: "a"/"an" before abbreviations: 3
- FX: "all ... not": 1
- FX: "alright": 1
- FX: "alumin(i)um": 2
- FX: "beg the question": 1
- FX: "between you and I": 1
- FX: "billion": a U.K. view: 2
- FX: "bloody": 1
- FX: "bug"="defect": 3
- FX: "catch-22": 1
- FX: "crap": 1
- FX: "different to", "different than": 1
- FX: "done"="finished": 1
- FX: "dressed to the nines": 1
- FX: "ebonics": 7
- FX: "flammable": 2
- FX: "fuck": 4
- FX: "functionality": 1
- FX: "go to hell in a handbasket": 1
- FX: "golf": 1
- FX: "impact"="to affect": 3
- FX: "jerry-built"/"jury-rigged": 1
- FX: "kangaroo": 2
- FX: "less" vs "fewer": 1
- FX: "like" vs "as": 1
- FX: "like" vs "such as": 3
- FX: "loo": 1
- FX: "love"="zero": 1
- FX: "mind your p's and q's": 1
- FX: "more than you can shake a stick at": 1
- FX: "mouses" vs "mice": 1
- FX: "nimrod": 1
- FX: "outrage": 1
- FX: "paparazzo": 1
- FX: "portmanteau word": 1
- FX: "quality": 1
- FX: "quiz": 1
- FX: "rule of thumb": 1
- FX: "shall" vs "will", "should" vs "would": 2
- FX: "spit and image"/"spitting image": 1
- FX: "suck"="be very unsatisfying": 2
- FX: "that" vs "which": 2
- FX: "titsling"/"brassiere": 1
- FX: "to call a spade a spade": 2
- FX: "whom": 3
- FX: Basic English: 4
- FX: Books on Britishisms, Canadianisms, etc.: 11
- FX: Books on phrasal verbs: 3
- FX: Books on usage: 5
- FX: Commonest words: 3
- FX: Dictionaries: 5
- FX: Distribution of English-speakers: 3
- FX: E-prime: 1
- FX: English is Tough Stuff: 4
- FX: FOREIGNERS' FAQS: 16
- FX: Foreign plurals => English singulars: 10
- FX: Gender-neutral pronouns: 1
- FX: General reference: 1
- FX: Grammars: 2
- FX: Guidelines for posting: 6
- FX: How do Americans pronounce "dog"?: 1
- FX: How do you spell "e-mail"?: 1
- FX: How reliable are dictionaries?: 1
- FX: How to represent pronunciation in ASCII: 1
- FX: Names of "&", "@", and "#": 1
- FX: Online dictionaries: 1
- FX: Online usage guides: 8
- FX: Plurals of Latin/Greek words: 3
- FX: Preposition at end: 3
- FX: Provenance of English vocabulary: 2
- FX: Related newsgroups: 13
- FX: Rhotic vs non-rhotic, intrusive "r": 1
- FX: Sentences grammatical in both Old English and Modern English: 5
- FX: Spelling reform: 1
- FX: Split infinitive: 1
- FX: Subjunctive: 3
- FX: The the "hoi polloi" debate: 2
- FX: Trademarks: 1
- FX: WELCOME TO ALT.USAGE.ENGLISH!: 3
- FX: What is "ghoti"?: 3
- FX: What is the phone number of the Grammar Hotline?: 4
- FX: What words are their own antonym?: 1
- FX: When to use "the": 6
- FX: Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms: 4
- FX: Why do we say "30 years old", but "a 30-year-old man"?: 1
- FX: Why is "I" capitalized?: 3
- FX: Wicca: 2
- FX: Words ending in "-gry": 10
- FX: Words pronounced differently according to context: 2
- FX: Words whose spelling has influenced their pronunciation: 2
- FX: Words without vowels: 2
- FX: [Prefatory remarks]: 3
- Fast FAQ:
[Prefatory remarks]
: 7
- Garbl: plain English, plain language: 1
- Genitive: AUE: Genitive is Not Always Possessive: 2
- Groups: AUE: "company is" and "company are": 2
- Home: The alt.usage.english Home Page: 14
- IPA II:
Credits:
: 2
- IPA II: ASCII IPA: a way to represent speech using a computer keyboard (American only): 2
- IPA II: Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs:
: 1
- IPA II: Slashes or square brackets?
: 2
- IPA I:
Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 7
- IPA I:
What is this?
: 2
- IPA I:
Credits
: 2
- IPA I:
Consonants and vowels
: 3
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 7
- IPA I: AUE: ASCII IPA in a nutshell: 2
- Interlinear IPA: AUE: Interlinear transliterations of ASCII IPA: 3
- Intro A:
Dictionary Abbreviations
: 7
- Intro A:
Guidelines for posting
: 3
- Intro A:
WELCOME TO alt.usage.english!
: 4
- Intro A: AUE Intro A: Welcome to AUE and Guidelines for Posting: 1
- Intro B:
Audio Archives
: 2
- Intro B:
Black English (African-American Vernacular English, Ebonics)
: 3
- Intro B:
British English
: 2
- Intro B:
Historical English, and English Literature
: 6
- Intro B:
Learning English as a Foreign Language
: 3
- Intro B:
On-line dictionaries: general
: 1
- Intro B:
Sites on words and language
: 2
- Intro B:
Word lists
: 2
- Intro B:
Writing and Grammar Guides On Line
: 8
- Intro B: AUE Intro B: Useful Web Sites for AUE Participants: 6
- Intro C:
"exception proves the rule"
: 1
- Intro C:
"obaue" or "ObAUE"
: 1
- Intro C:
American
: 2
- Intro C:
What words are their own antonym?
: 1
- Intro C:
words ending in "-gry"
: 3
- Intro C: AUE Intro C: Mini-FAQ on Words & Phrases: 1
- Intro D:
"A" or "an"
: 2
- Intro D:
"Gotten"
: 3
- Intro D:
"It's me" -v- "It is I"
: 1
- Intro D:
Gender-neutral pronouns: "he/she" -v- "they"
: 2
- Intro D:
Group nouns: singular or plural? "company is" -v- "company are"
: 1
- Intro D:
Why do we say "30 years old" but "a 30-year-old man"?
: 1
- Intro D: AUE Intro D: Mini-FAQ on Grammar, Usage & Punctuation: 1
- Intro E:
Humorous poems about spelling
: 2
- Intro E:
Isn't spelling reform a good idea?
: 2
- Intro E:
U.S. -v- REST-OF-WORLD ENGLISH
: 1
- Intro E:
What is "ghoti"?
: 3
- Intro G: AUE Intro G: Where is the FAQ?: 3
- Introduction: AUE: Intro Documents: 1
- Isles:
BRITAIN. The informal name for the United
: 1
- Isles:
BRITISH ISLES. A geographical term referring to the islands
: 1
- Isles:
BRITISH is the formal designation of the nationality of citizens
: 1
- Isles:
ENGLAND. The biggest and most populous of the four countries
: 1
- Isles:
IRELAND. As used by geographers, the second largest island
: 2
- Isles:
SCOTCH. The following is extracted from Mark Israel's FAQ
: 3
- Lawler: As to this discussion, the usual oppositions are those between: 2
- Lawler: The canonical paraphrase for will is be going to, idiosyncratically: 3
- Lawler: There is also another opposition among the formal auxiliaries, between: 2
- Lawler: -- more followup:: 2
- Lawler: >> For instance: English has only one phoneme, but it has: 9
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 3
- Lawler: >Just one question: Where does the past perfect ("have gone", "have sung"): 3
- Lawler: >Past tenses:: 33
- Lawler: >Your example of English and Caxton print shop goes a long way to convince: 6
- Lawler: Beth Levin is a computational linguist at Northwestern University: 15
- Lawler: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 29
- Lawler: I suspect much of the rancor that greets spellings of had've is: 2
- Lawler: Since you ask, here's a moderately complete list of polarity items,: 1
- Lawler: That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 2
- Lawler: The intonation curve is (roughly) up-down-back.up, graphically something: 6
- Lawler: There are at least 11 phonemically distinct vowels in standard American: 3
- Lawler: You may have noticed the Sapir quotation in my .sig.: 3
- Lawler: "Correctness": 5
- Lawler: "It" in "It's raining": 14
- Lawler: "Quote, Unquote": 2
- Lawler: "amn't": 4
- Lawler: "equally" and comparatives: 3
- Lawler: "only": 1
- Lawler: "vehicle": 1
- Lawler: A or An Historical Novel?: 5
- Lawler: Alumin(i)um: 3
- Lawler: As far as ... goes/is concerned: 1
- Lawler: Aural and Oral, Boy and Buoy: 2
- Lawler: Books on English, Language, and Linguistics: 2
- Lawler: Bring vs Take: 5
- Lawler: Can't Help (But) ...: 2
- Lawler: Canadian and American Raising: 3
- Lawler: Commas again: 7
- Lawler: Commas: 6
- Lawler: English L sounds: 7
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 37
- Lawler: English Modals: 5
- Lawler: English and Infinity: 6
- Lawler: Extraposition, plus Selected Short Subjects: 3
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 2
- Lawler: Hafta and Other Modal Paraphrases: 2
- Lawler: He, she, they?: 6
- Lawler: Headline grammar: 2
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 1
- Lawler: Hyphens: 4
- Lawler: Indian English: 25
- Lawler: Literacy: 2
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 2
- Lawler: News Item: 2
- Lawler: Object Complements: 12
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 3
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 7
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 5
- Lawler: Reams: 2
- Lawler: Ross Constraints: 1
- Lawler: Schwa and Central Vowels: 8
- Lawler: So Much For Spelling Reform: 14
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 7
- Lawler: The Academy: 2
- Lawler: Two kinds of "that-clauses": 2
- Lawler: Usage of "the hell": 2
- Lawler: Verbing Nouns: 6
- Lawler: Vowels Before R: 2
- Lawler: Who(m): 5
- Lawler: anymore: 1
- Lawler: gonna: 4
- Lawler: hadn't've: 2
- Lawler: striddly: 1
- Lawler: zilch: 7
- Links: Audio references
: 3
- Links: Collections of Web links
: 3
- Links: Dictionaries
: 3
- Links: Fun with words
: 1
- Links: Guides: Usage, Grammar, and Style
: 4
- Links: Learning English
: 4
- Links: Lexicons
: 1
- Links: Miscellaneous, language related
: 6
- Links: Online reference books
: 2
- Links: Online services
: 1
- Links: Phonetic alphabets
: 1
- Links: Rhetoric vocabulary
: 1
- Links: Spelling
: 1
- Links: Thesauruses
: 1
- Links: Words about words
: 3
- Lynch: Old English.: 1
- Morris: English/Body English: 2
- Quinion: Cambridge International Dictionary of English on CD-ROM (review): 1
- Quinion: Collins English Dictionary (book review): 1
- Quinion: Dictionary of New Zealand English (book review): 1
- Quinion: Encarta World English Dictionary (book review): 1
- Quinion: Green English (book review): 1
- Quinion: Legal language in England: 1
- Quinion: New Oxford Dictionary of English (book review): 1
- Quinion: New Oxford Dictionary of English on CD-ROM (review): 1
- Quinion: New Oxford Thesaurus of English (book review): 1
- Quinion: New Penguin English Dictionary (book review): 1
- Quinion: Oxford Dictionary of Idioms (book review): 1
- Quinion: Oxford English Dictionary Online (review): 1
- Quinion: Oxford English Dictionary on CD-ROM, Version Two (review): 1
- Quinion: Oxford Pop-up English Language Reference Shelf (CD-ROM review): 1
- Quinion: Oxford World English Dictionary Shelf (CD-ROM review): 1
- Quinion: Pocket Fowler (book review): 1
- Quinion: Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases (book review): 1
- Quinion: Warden of English (book review): 1
- Subjunctive?: AUE: Does English Have a Subjunctive Mood?: 9
- Supp: AUE FAQ Supplement: 2
- UCLE02: The history of ucle: 12
- UCLE03: A uk.culture.language.english
: 1
- UCLE03: Judith
: 1
- UCLE03: Lindsay
: 1
- UCLE03: Pronunciation, Posting Etiquette, and Logo: 1
- UCLE03: Tee Shirts
: 1
- UCLE03: The
: 1
- UCLE04: Our Favourite Cultural and Language Links
: 9
- UCLE04: ucle links: 1
- UCLE05: John Davies's commentary
: 3
- UCLE05: Language references: 1
- UCLE05: What’s
: 16
- UCLE06: Rhetorical vocabulary: 1
- UCLE07: Some significant numbers from literature and literary criticism: 1
- UCLE08: Articles: 1
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 1
- UCLE09: “Bloody”
: 1
- UCLE09: “It went pear-shaped”
: 1
- UCLE09: Anorak
: 1
- UCLE09: Daring
: 1
- UCLE09: Holidays
: 1
- UCLE09: More articles: 1
- UCLE09: One
: 1
- UCLE09: Rivers
: 2
- UCLE10: More articles: 1
- UCLE10: The
: 1
- UCLE11: More articles: 1
- UCLE11: The
: 1
- UCLE12: More articles: 1
- UCLE12: News
: 1
- UCLE13: "Rearranging deck chairs
: 1
- UCLE13: Custer's last stand
: 1
- UCLE13: More articles: 4
- UCLE13: The Ides of March
: 1
- UCLE13: Waterloo
: 5
- UCLE14: Articles: 1
- UCLE14: Eponymous London Shopkeepers
: 1
- UCLE15:
The Tooth Fairy
: 2
- UCLE15: Bonfire
: 1
- UCLE15: Gossip
: 1
- UCLE15: Round-Robin and
: 3
- UCLE15: Scuttlebutt, Grapevine,
: 1
- UCLE15: ucle page 15: 1
- UCLE16: ucle page 16: 1
- What's new?:
6 December 2001
: 5
- What's new?:
10 March 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
15 February 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
2 September 2001:
: 9
- What's new?:
21 March 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
23 February 2002
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Introductions to alt.usage.english:
: 2
- Where FAQ?: AUE: Places to find Mark Israel's FAQ: 1
- Yaelf: "No lawful standard...": The Evolution of English Dictionaries: 1
- Yaelf: "The Old English Pages". An acclaimed site with a mailing list, downloads, and further links.: 1
- Yaelf: (WD) I am interested in the phrase hammer and tongs because it is used by our fraternity (Theta Tau, a professional fraternity for engineering students). We are of the belief that this is a very old English phrase: 1
- Yaelf: 10/08/2001 Entry: "The English Language Metaphor.": 1
- Yaelf: 12th & 13th Century English Textile Surnames: 1
- Yaelf: A Glossary for Medieval English Towns: 1
- Yaelf: American English: 1
- Yaelf: Articles on the history of English: 1
- Yaelf: Common Errors in English: 1
- Yaelf: Creating a parsed and searchable diachronic corpus of present-day spoken English: 1
- Yaelf: English Usage dot Misc: 1
- Yaelf: English language newsgroups on the net: 1
- Yaelf: English slang and colloquialisms used in the United Kingdom: 1
- Yaelf: English, as She is Spoke at McMurdo.: 1
- Yaelf: English-only education over bilingual education is explored in Contexts, ASA's newest magazine: 1
- Yaelf: English/Cockney Rhyming Slang Dictionary: 1
- Yaelf: GCSE English Tutorials: 1
- Yaelf: Global English?: 1
- Yaelf: In Europe, Going Global Means, Alas, English: 1
- Yaelf: Is English the "Official" Language of the UK?: 1
- Yaelf: Is the English language changing?: 1
- Yaelf: Judge's English-Only Directive Rescinded by Paterson Mayor: 1
- Yaelf: Mark Twain and the English Language: 1
- Yaelf: Microsoft Encarta World English Dictionary (North American Edition): 1
- Yaelf: Oxford English Dictionary plans growth in U.S. staff: 1
- Yaelf: Plain English Campaign awards "Foot in Mouth Award" to Tracey Emin: 1
- Yaelf: Politics and the English Language (1946): 1
- Yaelf: Search Studies in English Literature: 1
- Yaelf: Search The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: 1
- Yaelf: Seoul City to hear from foreigners on faulty English usage: 1
- Yaelf: Swedish-English Dictionary: 1
- Yaelf: The English to Geordie Translator: 1
- Yaelf: The History of American English: 1
- Yaelf: The Plumb Design Visual Thesaurus is an exploration of sense relationships within the English language. By clicking on words, you follow a thread of meaning, creating a spatial map of linguistic associations.: 1
- Yaelf: The alternative FAQ For alt.usage.english: 1
- Yaelf: The establishment of the English RP accent : a flawed interpretation?: 1
- Yaelf: The most beautiful words in the English language: 1
- Yaelf: The need for simple English on the Web: 1
- Yaelf: Tony Jebson's site on learning Old English. This site includes articles on the history and origins of Old English.: 2
- Yaelf: U.S. firm to test China's English skills on the Net: 1
- Yaelf: What is "Hiberno-English"? Is it a dialect of English?: 2
- Yaelf: What is the oldest phrase in English still in current use?: 1
- Yaelf: WordNet: a lexical database for the English language: 1
- Yaelf: Yourdictionary.com has a quick lookup, word of the day (English and Spanish), articles, and essays on English topics. It's great!: 2
-
AUE people
: 1
- 11. The Commonwealth
: 1
- 2. England and Wales
: 3
- A ucle resource page: 6
- A ucle resource page: 6
- AUE: "Pear-shaped", supplementary comments: 1
- AUE: "anymore" and "any more": 2
- AUE: ASCII IPA files: 2
- AUE: About the alt.usage.english newsgroup: 9
- AUE: Additional comments about deja.com: 3
- AUE: Analysis of Some Mark Barratt Vowels: 1
- AUE: Announcement of creation of uk.culture.language.english: 16
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 11
- AUE: Contact: 2
- AUE: Dictionaries: 3
- AUE: Grammar Books: 5
- AUE: London Millennium Boink, December 1999: 1
- AUE: London Symposium Boink, September 1998: 6
- AUE: Perlfect Search: 4
- AUE: Plural Formation: 2
- AUE: Search Information: 3
- AUE: Summer Boink, London, June 1999: 2
- AUE: Thou, Thee, and Archaic Grammar: 2
- AUE: What is prescriptivism?: 3
- AUE: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 1
- AUE: Worldwide Distribution of English Speakers: 14
- Credits
: 1
- Our images: 1
- Preface
: 14
- The Poetry of F. W. Moorman: 2
- Yet to come: 2
- Yet to come: 1
:English-Irish :English-language :English-lover :English-oriented :English-speaker :English-speakers :English-speaking :English-to-Old-English :English-usage :Englished :Englishers :Englishes :Englishman :Englishmen :Englishness :engraved :engraver's :engulfed :enhance :Enhanced :Eniac :Enid
- RH WotD: Wendalyn and Enid: 1
:enigma :enjoin :enjoy :enjoyable :enjoyed :enjoying :enjoys :enlarged :enlargement :enlighten :enlightening
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