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				@ -339,6 +339,105 @@ When a {{{phon(t)}}} precedes another consonant, it becomes a glottal stop.
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Early Modern Eittlandic /Eittland/ {{{phon(ɑɪtlɑnd)}}} > Modern  Eittlandic {{{phon(ɑɪʔlɑnd)}}}
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#+html: :::
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** Spelling and pronunciation
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Eittlandic is written in two different alphabets: Modern Futhark, also
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known as the Eittlandic runes, and the Latin alphabet. Eittland saw
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some use of the Latin alphabet in the 13th and 14th century, but
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documents ceased to be produced with it until the 17th century, when
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immigrants from continental Europe brought this script with them and
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as commerce opened up with European countries again. Until a few
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decades ago, the Modern Futhark alphabet was the most popular alphabet
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in use in Eittland. But since the democratisation of the computer and
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smartphone, usage of the Latin alphabet saw a quick rise in
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popularity. According to some estimates, only 2% of Eittlanders used
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the Latin alphabet more often than the Modern Futhark alphabet in
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1920, while in 2020, 23% of Eittlanders primarily use the Latin
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alphabet.
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Most letters are used the same way in Eittlandic as they are in most
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standard European languages, with a few additions that lack in the
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standard Latin alphabet, Just like Icelandic, Eittlandic still uses
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the letters «þ» and «ð» when using the Latin alphabet. These letters
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were already used in Old Norse but nether became deprecated, unlike in
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other Nordic languages such as Swedish or Norwegian, or other Germanic
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languages such as English. They represent the sounds {{{phon(θ)}}} and
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{{{phon(ð)}}} respectively; unlike Old Norse, these two sounds became
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distinct enough to constrast in some words, such as in /maðr/ (/man/) and
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/maþr/ (maths). You will also find vowels with acute accents. They used
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to represent long vowels, but due to sound changes, they are
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associated with a lower tone and generaly more lax vowel, as described
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below.
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Aside from Standard Eittlandic, there is no standard spelling and the
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language is written generally phonetically, although there is a
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tendency to keep the spelling reflecting the historical pronunciation
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of words; i.e. when representing the vowel {{{phon(ɛ̀)}}}, Eittlanders will
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tend to write «á» when it comes from a historically long {{{phon(ɑ)}}} but
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«é» if it comes from a historically long {{{phon(e)}}}. There is also a
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tendency in dialects other than Standard Eittlandic to write
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word-final vowels, even if they are no longer pronounced, as in «posi»
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(Standard Eittlandic /pos/, meaning /seal/).
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These are the letters used natively in Eittlandic:
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#+begin_quote
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a b d ð e f g h i j k l m n o p r s t þ u v y z ø œ
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#+end_quote
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All vowels, with the exception of «ø» and «œ», can bear an acute
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accent, extending the list with:
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#+begin_quote
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á é í ó ú ý
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#+end_quote
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Most of these letters represent their standard phonological value, but
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a few don't. Here are some rules that will help you read Eittlandic
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phonetically:
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- «a» :: this is an unrounded, open back vowel {{{phon(ɑ)}}} in some
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  dialects, or front {{{phon(a)}}} in some others
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- «á» :: this is an unrounded, mid open front vowel {{{phon(ɛ)}}} with a low
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  or falling tone
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- «ð» :: this is a voiced dentad fricative {{{phon(ð)}}}, as in English “this”
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- «é» :: pronounced like «á»
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- «g» :: the most unstable letter in Eittlandic. When in contact with
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  another consonant, it will be a standard voiced uvular stop {{{phon(ɡ)}}}.
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  However, if it is a word-initial consonent immediately followed by a
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  vowel or between vowels, it will be pronounced as a {{{phon(j)}}}. Lastly,
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  if it is word-final and preceeded by a vowel, it is pronounced as a
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  voiced velar fricative {{{phon(ɣ)}}}.
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- «í» :: this is an unrounded mid closed front vowel {{{phon(e)}}} with a
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  low or falling tone. It contrasts with «e» wich is pronounced with a
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  neutral or high tone
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- «j» :: this is the palatal semivowel {{{phon(j)}}}, as in German or other
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  North Germanic languages
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- «ó» :: this is a rounded mid open back vowel {{{phon(ɔ)}}} with a low or falling
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  tone
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- «p» :: in most places, pronounced as a voiceless bilabial plosive
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  {{{phon(p)}}} as expected, unless before a «t» where it becomes a
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  voiceless bilabial fricative {{{phon(ɸ)}}}
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- «þ» :: this is the unvoiced counterpart to «ð», the {{{phon(θ)}}}, as in
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  English “think”
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- «ú» :: this is a rounded mid closed back vowel {{{phon(o)}}} with a low or
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  falling tone. It constrasts with neutral or high tone «o»
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- «v» :: this is the voiced bilabial fricative {{{phon(β)}}}, unless when
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  following an «h» in a word-initial position; in this case, «hv» is
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  pronounced as a voiceless labialised velar approximant {{{phon(ʍ)}}}.
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- «y» :: this is the rounded front high vowel {{{phon(y)}}}, as in German /ü/ or French /u/
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- «ý» :: this is the mid front rounded vowel {{{phon(ø)}}} with a low or
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  falling tone, contrasting with the neutral or high tone «ø»
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  described below
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- «ø» :: is a mid front rounded vowel {{{phon(ø)}}}, like German «ö» or
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  French «eu» in /deux/
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- «œ» :: this is a low, lax, frount rounded vowel {{{phon(œ)}}}, like French
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  «eu» in «neuf», but with an additional low or falling tone
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There are another three additional digraphs when it comes to vowels:
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- «au» :: this is a rounded mid open back vowel {{{phon(ɔ)}}} with a neutral
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  or high tone, which contrasts with «ó»
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- «ei» :: this is one of the two diphthongs left in Eittlandic,
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  {{{phon(ɑɪ)}}}
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- «ey» :: this is the other diphthong left in Eittlandic, {{{phon(œʏ)}}}
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** Vowel Inventory
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Modern Eittlandic has a total of ten simple vowels and three
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diphthongs, regardless of the dialect. It does not directly inherit
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@ -383,32 +482,6 @@ graph{graph[dpi=300,bgcolor="transparent"];node[shape=plaintext];"vowels-0ju80zw
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#+html: <ImgFigure src="/img/eittlandic/vowel-feature-tree.png" alt="Eittlandic Vowel Featural Tree">Featural tree of Eittlandic vowels</ImgFigure>
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Here is a quick guide regarding the pronunciation of these vowels:
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- a {{{phon(ɑ)}}} :: as in General American English “hot” with a high tone
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- á {{{phon(ɛ̀)}}} :: as in General American English “bed” with a low tone
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- æ {{{phon(ɛ)}}} :: as in General American English “bed” with a high tone
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- e {{{phon(e)}}} :: as in French “été” or General American English “may”
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  with a high tone
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- é {{{phon(ɛ̀)}}} :: see {{{phon(æ)}}}
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- i {{{phon(i)}}} :: as in English “free” with a high tone
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- í {{{phon(è)}}} :: as in French “été” or General American English “may”
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  with a low tone
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- o {{{phon(o)}}} :: as in French “beau” or Cockney English “yawn” with a
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  high tone
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- ó {{{phon(ɔ̀)}}} :: as in General American English “thought” with a low
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  tone
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- u {{{phon(u)}}} :: as in French “mou” or General American English “boot”
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  with a high tone
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- ú {{{phon(ò)}}} :: as in French “beau” or Cockney English “yawn” with a
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  low tone
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- y {{{phon(y)}}} :: as in French “lune” with a high tone
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- ý {{{phon(ø̀)}}} :: as in French “deux” with a low tone
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- œ/ǿ {{{phon(œ)}}} :: as in French “neuf” with a low tone
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- ei {{{phon(ɑɪ)}}} :: as in English “I”
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- au {{{phon(ɔʊ)}}} :: similar to Canadian “ow” or in General American
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  English “bow”, but more open
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- ey {{{phon(œʏ)}}} :: as if it were “œy” but more open
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Eittlandic also has a second vowel inventory dedicated to unstressed
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vowels. While the one described above describes all vowels found in
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stressed positions, the unstressed inventory is much lighter.
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@ -500,10 +573,36 @@ Note the features borne by the diphthongs:
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#+end_src
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** Consonant Inventory
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/Under construction/
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Regarding Eittlandic's consonants, the two main changes from Old Norse
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other than changes in their pronunciation is the now differenciation
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between «þ» and «ð» where in Old Norse, the former was used
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word-initially while the latter was used in all other positions.
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Similarly, the «f» letter was used to represent both {{{phon(f)}}}
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word-initially and {{{phon(v)}}} in all other positions. In Eittlandic,
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voiced «f» {{{phon(v)}}} merged into «v» {{{phon(β)}}}. Therefore, the letter «f»
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is no longer used to represent {{{phon(v)}}} anymore; the letter «v» is
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instead used to represent both historical «v» and historically voiced
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«f».
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Occasionally, the letter «h» may precede another consonant in a
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word-initial position, mainly «l», «r», and «v». These consonants
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become devoiced, with «hl», «hr», and «hv» becoming {{{phon(l̥)}}}, {{{phon(r̥)}}},
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and {{{phon(ʍ)}}} respectively.
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*** Private Data                                                :noexport:
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** Underlying vowels
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While most word-final vowels were dropped a few centuries ago, they
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still exist as underlying vowels that may affect the word's
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morphology. By default, when there is no final vowel for a noun, a
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dummy «i» is used to join the word with the definite morphene
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together. For instance, /dag/ (/day/), a word with no underlying vowel,
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which becomes /dagin/ in its singular accusative definite form. However,
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even if it is no longer present in its non-definite form, /sag/ still
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bears the word-final vowel «a» which appears in its definite form,
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such as /sagat/ (singular accusative definite form).
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** Pitch and Stress
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The original bitonal pitch accent of Eittlandic is thought to have
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been lost around the 10th or 11th century, though it is no certain
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