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"pugnacity" Definitions
  1. a strong desire to argue or fight with other people

95 Sentences With "pugnacity"

How to use pugnacity in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pugnacity" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pugnacity". Mastering all the usages of "pugnacity" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In hindsight, Mr. Sherman says he underestimated Mr. Ailes's pugnacity.
Up to that point, Bobby's pugnacity had been accepted by management.
The president-elect has the blunt pugnacity of the Breitbartian style.
It connects them to the enduring Mattis brand of bookish military pugnacity.
What would likely be even more appealing to Trump is Christie's famous pugnacity.
Still, some in the party rue the lack of pugnacity on their own side.
He's a college dropout with a spotty track record and a reputation for pugnacity.
Solnit, an accomplished and influential thinker, tackles her subject with characteristic frankness and pugnacity.
On foreign policy he has demonstrated a pugnacity easily exceeding the old Republican Party's.
Indeed, his pugnacity and pride should have told Trump he would be an unlikely toady.
"Bernie clearly has the pugnacity," Burtka, executive director for The American Conservative magazine, told Hill.
Pence sat scowling during the Games last week, subtly using his platform to project pugnacity.
Perhaps that explains the recent pugnacity of Matteo Renzi, Italy's prime minister, regarding European fiscal rules.
During a tour of the United Kingdom this week, he has toggled between pugnacity and reassurance.
But it also adds to the volatility of South Africa's economy and the pugnacity of its politics.
His supporters prize his pugnacity, and he prefers table-pounding defiance to the intricacies of legal compromise.
Their intensity and pugnacity make them either perfect villains or misunderstood masterminds, depending on your point of view.
It's easy to imagine voters who like Ted Cruz's pugnacity, for example, gravitating toward Trump if Cruz drops out.
" A movement of "utter nihilism," it is "kept alive in the masses only in the form of permanent pugnacity.
Given the famed pugnacity of the Journal editorial page, I assume it will eventually, and I'll keep you posted.
Her "Apprentice"-style pugnacity notwithstanding, Mr. Trump insists there is a side of her that she keeps well hidden.
Mr. O'Farrill's compositions cover a range of moods, from swinging pugnacity ("Lower Brooklyn Botanical Union") to prowling elegy ("Survival Instincts").
Kim is poised to preach to the world that his policy of socialist pugnacity and anti-social patience really pays.
Most importantly, the song set a tone for this concert, the opening night of Drake's "Summer Sixteen" tour: pugnacity, provocation, sneering.
It's a sweet-toned anecdote, about a street-smart boy named Dud and his dog, that's spiced with a slangy pugnacity.
Manhattan has energy and money; Brooklyn has hipster cachet and old-world, brownstone beauty; the Bronx has pugnacity; Staten Island has apartness.
" That pugnacity didn't slow him down: In 22012, Cramer ascended to state party chairman; one local newspaper called him a "political pit bull.
She assails colonialism, machismo, hypocrisy and hate, and praises Pan-American solidarity and traditions, in songs that balance pugnacity, elegance and lithe rhythms.
Trump's history of pugnacity at multilateral gatherings, which brought last year's G73 summit to an acrimonious end, means there is scant hope for substantive agreements.
Mr Wrangham is also an optimist, and even posits a counterintuitive role for certain types of pugnacity in keeping humans on the path towards good.
" This was part of Darwin's larger attempt to explain, through evolution, "the greater size, strength, courage, pugnacity, and energy of man, in comparison with woman.
Will his pugnacity help or hurt Bolton as he coordinates the Trump administration's responses to the Syria gas attack and its diplomatic outreach to North Korea?
He was not the first to make that promise—indeed his pugnacity recalled two of the most successful third-party candidates before him, Theodore Roosevelt and George Wallace.
U.S. President Donald Trump's history of pugnacity at multilateral gatherings, which brought last year's G7 summit to an acrimonious conclusion, means there is scant hope for substantive agreements.
Gérard Collomb, the departing interior minister, praised the capture in a post on Twitter, lauding the "pugnacity and determination" of the police who had carried out the raid.
But his base prizes his pugnacity above any realistically attainable concrete achievement, and he sees attacking Democrats as weak on crime and immigration as a better strategy than compromise.
Isabelle leaps from encounter to encounter with an ironic abruptness, and her sublime pugnacity gives rise to a riotous tirade during a jaunt in a rich landowner's ample woods.
The use of the phrase "aggressions and their consequences" in the initial announcement suggests MbS, who is notorious for his diplomatic pugnacity, was involved; the king is more benign.
The president's pugnacity on immigration took flight in 2015 when his vows to build a border wall drew an enthusiastic response at his rallies and soon became his signature proposal.
Mr. Klein, a lifelong Bronx resident known for his political pugnacity and personal flair, has responded aggressively to the accusations, issuing a pair of letters on Friday testifying to his good character.
In other words, before Barack Obama's presidency and the reactionary backlash it triggered on the right, Republican voters were not yet ready for the blend of pugnacity and quiet bigotry Mr Giuliani offered.
In its early days at Harvard, football was openly hailed (by Teddy Roosevelt, among others) as a mechanism to cultivate masculine hardiness and pugnacity in both athletes and spectators, precisely because it was violent.
" Errol Louis assessed a winning strategy in Warren's pugnacity and preparation; likewise, Patti Solis Doyle saw a "thrilling tactical moment" when Warren "gutted Bloomberg on his non-disclosure agreements in cases of alleged sexual harassment.
Evening programming, which embodied the Fox News brand, was dominated by right-wing commentators like Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity, who hurled opinions and vented resentments with a pugnacity that reflected their boss's own combativeness.
Consider this list: Corey Lewandowski, Trump's first campaign manager, was the embodiment of obnoxious pugnacity and ended up on video grabbing a female reporter at an event, forcibly preventing her from asking Trump a question.
A self-designed symbol of New York pugnacity and success, he has been a fixture in the city's tabloid newspapers for four decades; Mr Cruz is best known to many New Yorkers for his fatuous slur.
Mr. Trump's celebrity and pugnacity had turned previous debates into widely watched spectacles that frequently descended into shouting matches, dueling insults and, in Mr. Trump's case, frequent mockery of his rivals as listless, flailing and even ugly.
Combining pugnacity with administrative experience, plus the residual respectability of office—tarnished though it is, in Mr Christie's case, by a scandal over the part-closure of a bridge into New York City—he might fit Mr Trump's bill.
He has interacted with American officials for decades and been a fixture on the Washington scene for the past nine years, jowly and cordial with an easy smile and fluent if accented English, yet a pugnacity in advocating Russia's assertive policies.
The calm pugnacity of Pop Smoke, a twenty-year-old breakout star and Brooklyn native, fits nicely into the city's hip-hop lineage, but his sound is, quite literally, foreign—most of his grimy beats are made by 808Melo, a producer in London.
Others played to the crowd's interests, emblematized by the staccato pugnacity of NLE Choppa's "Shotta Flow" and the reliably explosive Chief Keef chestnut "Faneto" from all the way back in 2014, a time that was effectively the birthplace of this generation's taste.
These tendencies appeal to a wide-ranging, well-heeled conservative crowd but haven't cost him the loyalty of a younger audience, who delight in the way he combines the cable-news pugnacity of Tucker Carlson with the studied contemptuousness of Christopher Hitchens.
It successfully endeavors to bring unusual audacity and pugnacity into the public eye so as to say something lasting about the human circus — about obsession and intensity — because many of today's art collectors have grown overly consensual, aesthetically flabby, and conventional in their culture zapping.
PARELES Tones and I — the Australian songwriter Toni Watson — conquered the world last year with "Dance Monkey," and she follows it up with a variation on its music and attitude: plinking piano chords and her annoyed-child voice carry her from petulance to righteous pugnacity.
Two weeks ago, when the circumstances seemed dire in the Rangers' two-games-to-one deficit against Montreal, Coach Alain Vigneault benched Tanner Glass for the rookie Pavel Buchnevich, prioritizing skill over pugnacity, in a move that helped lift the Rangers to three consecutive wins.
I lived through this turbulence during my years as a diplomat in Moscow, navigating the curious mix of hope and humiliation that I remember so vividly in the Russia of Boris N. Yeltsin, and the pugnacity and raw ambition of Vladimir V. Putin's Kremlin.
" On her stand-alone version, Remy Ma builds on Young M.A.'s pugnacity with more of her own, recalling a lifetime of hooligan instincts (alongside Terror Squad partner Fat Joe): "Quick to smack a ho, even Joe know/Been doing that since he was spittin' 'Flow Joe.
At a moment when confrontational progressives such as Representative-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are captivating the party's imagination and tapping into its anger, do Democrats need a firebrand Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders type who can whip up the liberal left and match Mr. Trump's pugnacity?
For all of the headline-grabbing pugnacity of Mr. Trump's United Nations speech earlier this week, in which he mocked North Korea's leader, Kim Jong-un, as "Rocket Man" on a "suicide mission," the president made it clear on Thursday that he was still open to negotiations.
Mr. Macron appeared to briefly put himself on the side of the protesters, declaring at the outset that the lesson of the Yellow Vest movement — he was careful not to name it — was that "we are not resigned," seemingly identifying with the pugnacity of the protesters.
" J.P. "I'm Still Here" testifies to real-life pugnacity in vintage soul style, with Ms. Jones belting an autobiographical digest of "all the things I've been through just to sing this song" over the bluesy funk of the Dap-Kings, from working as a prison guard to surviving "the big C." It's a new song from the documentary "Miss Sharon Jones!
Y.), to become the committee's senior Democrat — a move blessed by the party's leaders, who wanted a figure with Cummings's pugnacity to go toe-to-toe with former Chairman Darrell IssaDarrell Edward IssaThe Hill's Morning Report — US strikes approved against Iran pulled back Darrell Issa eyes return to Congress Trump's 2020 campaign strategy is to be above the law MORE (R-Calif.).
Her quixotic character, pugnacity, ambition and daring meant that she was both admired and detested in equal measure. She developed her political connections whilst rubbing shoulders with political leaders and personalities.
He foresaw man on the moon and predicted World War II war as early as 1935. His eclecticism, his perspicacity, his pugnacity and stubbornness allowed us all to discover a whole new art culture.
An oddity in Cadwallon are the names chosen for the character attributes. Rather than utilize traits such as strength and dexterity Cadwallon uses words that are in common use other places in Confrontation fluff like Pugnacity and Style.
Asils were first used for cock fighting and may be considered fighting cocks. Aseel is noted for its pugnacity. The chicks often fight when they are just a few weeks old and mature roosters will fight to the death. Hens can also be very aggressive towards each other.
Or, instinct-emotion pairs like flight-fear, revulsion-disgust, pugnacity-anger, and others. (pp. 146–153) "The public relations counsel sometimes uses the current stereotypes, sometimes combats them, and sometimes creates new ones." (p. 162) As the methods of psychological influence are many and various, Bernays proposes to focus on fundamentals.
After serving the Capetians during the fourteenth century and the beginning of the fifteenth, the Armagnacs were openly seeking to emancipate themselves. They assumed that the role they played during the Hundred Years' War gave them greater rights than the rest of the nobility. They had not counted on the pugnacity of King Louis XI.
Sigmund Freud, L'interprétation du rêve (Die Traumdeutung, 1900), Œuvres complètes de Freud / Psychanalyse (OCF.P) IV, Paris: PUF/Quadrige, 2010, . Some qualities have been recognized by Hannibal since Antiquity: audacity, courage and pugnacity. They are notably implemented during an adventure racing starting from Lyon and leading to Turin through the Alps and bearing his name: the Hannibal raid.
While Carlists were typically associated with intransigency and pugnacity if not indeed fanaticism, Elorza has usually demonstrated a penchant for compromise.Estornés Zubizarreta 1990, p. 122 The Basque case that Elorza advanced was shaped along Traditionalist lines. In terms of legal arrangements he stuck to the concept of re-implementation of old province-specific separate arrangements perhaps integrated in a vague, vasco-navarrese framework.
One of his notable feats was on 6 March 1967 during a match against Great Britain national team in Wigan, a match where he exemplified himself by his pugnacity and his resistance to bad gestures from opposing players ( notably, Bill Bryant) which would earn him the applause of the British public at the . Outside the field, he is a company manager, after working as a "locksmith welder".
Imperial troops joined the siege of Rietberg and in June 1557, the city was starved and had to capitulate. John was taken prisoner. Initially, he was held at the Imperial castle at Büderich (near Wesel); in 1560, he was transferred to Cologne, where he died in captivity in 1562 and was buried. His pugnacity and power struggles earned him he nickname "John the Mad".
She also is seen firing a gun right alongside Ernesto, the guerrilla leader. James Robert Parish and George H. Hill state that Pam Grier is "an intriguing mixture of pugnacity and femininity, with a heavy dose of world-weary cynicism" despite, according to Bob McCann, the movie itself being "somewhat listless",McCann, Bob. Encyclopedia of African American Actresses in Film and Television. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2010. Print.
They singled out Team Canada Assistant Coach John Ferguson for his "pugnacity". They did compliment Team Canada on their defensive skills but felt that the Soviets were technically superior, and, but for some deplorable mistakes by their players, the Soviets would have won the series. Alan Eagleson was not repentant for his actions during game eight. Eagleson was not the only one jostled by police; Eagleson's wife and the Canadian ambassador's wife were also jostled.
After an initial scene featuring a Ford which is extremely reluctant to start, most of the action takes place on an excursion ferry. Gags revolve around seasickness, which Charlie, a fat couple, and even the boat's all-black ragtime band succumb to, deckchairs, and Charlie's comic pugnacity. This is followed by a scene of the family returning home, and encountering trouble at an intersection, which involves a traffic cop, and hot tar.
Stanley Sporkin (February 7, 1932March 23, 2020) was a director of enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), general counsel for the Central Intelligence Agency and United States federal judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. His 40-year federal judicial career, beginning in 1961 at the SEC, at times attracted both derision and admiration for his perceived judicial activism, at times also displaying a quick mind and pugnacity on the bench.
Though Tucker may have displayed in his old age "a spirit of pugnacity becoming earlier years," as one critic claimed, such a nature was not in evidence with his family. He corresponded positively and frequently with his children and vacationed with them in the summers in Virginia and New York. He appears to have been consistent in his devotion to his family, which was returned by them in kind. His exchanges with them were replete with a concern for their financial well being.
Relkino was a "very attractive, well-made" bay horse with a white blaze and a white coronet on his right front foot bred by Cleaboy Farms. He was sired by Relko, the French-trained winner of the 1963 Epsom Derby. His dam, Pugnacity, was a "grand racemare" (rated 117 by Timeform), whose wins included the Lowther Stakes, Falmouth Stakes and King George Stakes. She produced several other winners including Triumphant, who in turn produced the Irish Champion Stakes winner Timarida.
The two young people fall in love, but Mardok kidnaps Evelyn. After her escape and Mardok's death, the novel concludes with the young couple's discovery of some other survivors at Assisi."Books: Apocalypse, Pugnacity", Time, 29 July 1940. For Charles Holland, reviewing the novel in the 1940s, Noyes' combination of "such elements of human interest as apologetics, art, travel and a captivating love story" mean that the reader of The Last Man is assured of both "an intellectual treat and real entertainment".
Listed at and , Courtney was an American League catcher whose pugnacity and timely base hits made headlines in the 1950s. Fiercely combative, he played his position under unusual handicaps. A natural left-hander, he taught himself to use his right arm, and he also was myopic, being widely considered as the first Major League catcher to wear eyeglasses. Courtney appeared in one game for the New York Yankees in before being traded to the St. Louis Browns at the end of the season.
The overall command of the Swiss assault was given to Anne de Montmorency. As the Swiss columns advanced towards the park, he ordered them to pause and wait for the French artillery to bombard the Imperial defences, but the Swiss refused to obey.Oman, Art of War, 180; Taylor, Art of War, 126. Perhaps the Swiss captains doubted that the artillery would have any effect on the earthworks; historian Charles Oman suggests that it is more likely they were "inspired by blind pugnacity and self- confidence".
Caffarelli was notorious for his unpredictability and displays of temperament, both on and off stage. On stage he is reputed to have sung his own preferred versions irrespective of what his colleagues were doing, mimicking them while they sang their solos and sometimes conversing with members of the public in their boxes during the same. Off stage his pugnacity and fierce demeanour led to his willingness to fight duels under little provocation. Such behaviour led to spells of house arrest and imprisonment for assault and for misconduct during performances.
Blindsnakes are known to consume the larvae and pupae of these ants. Colonies are also a host for M. inquilina, a social parasite that lays its eggs inside the colony. M. nigriceps is an extremely aggressive ant, and larger colonies may rival other colonies of a different Myrmecia species (such as M. gulosa) in terms of fierceness and pugnacity. While the mandibles cause little to no pain in humans, the ant is equipped with a painful and powerful sting that is found at the end of the gaster.
As a descendant of the broodmare Ballisland, Pugnacity was a distant relative of the Irish 1,000 Guineas winner Tarascon. As a yearling, the colt was offered for sale and bought for 58,000 guineas by the trainer Dick Hern, acting on behalf of Marcia Anastasia Christoforides, Lady Beaverbrook. The price was the highest paid at auction for any yearling in Britain in 1974. Lady Beaverbrook was considered an eccentric character who gave most of her horses names consisting of one word with seven letters (Bustino, Terimon, Boldboy, Niniski, Mystiko, Petoski), as this was the most common form for Derby winners.
While in the United States, he came in conflict with American missionaries and the values of what he called western "enterprise, pugnacity, and dead-in-earnestness". He argued that Chinese religion was non-sectarian and pragmatic, and that the "practical common sense of the Chinese" makes the task of saving "the Heathen Chinee" difficult, even more so by the "growing sense of nationalism" after the "farcical Treaty of Versailles". Wang joined the Columbia faculty in 1929 was also a research assistant at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1928-1936. and was among the few Chinese scholars employed at American universities in 1928.
His psychology sought to explain how our need to grasp, accept and live with conceptual opposites such as the sublime and the devilish, the humble and the proud, and the docile and the energetic, led us in the direction of religion. He also tied human emotions, especially anger and pugnacity, to religious faith. To understand the linkage, Stratton collected data on religious writings and the rites and traditions of civilizations then considered not as advanced. In Anger: Its Religious and Moral Significance he listed exhaustively and studied the major religions of the world and classified them into three categories.
Crerand signed for Celtic, following a spell playing Scottish junior football for Duntocher Hibernian in midfield alongside future Australia international Pat Hughes. After six years at Celtic, making 120 appearances, scoring five goals, he signed for Manchester United on 6 February 1963, the fifth anniversary of the Munich air disaster, making his debut against Blackpool. He was a hard-tackling midfielder who, while known for his tenacity and tackling ability, was also an accurate passer, creating chances for attacking players such as Bobby Charlton and George Best. Pace was not one of his attributes; pugnacity certainly was.
At nightfall, the battalion has advanced only 200 meters. Seeing that the Americans gradually ate away at their lines, the German artillery redoubled its fire, managing to contain the two regiments, and raising fears with General McLain of a new counterattack. Before the pugnacity of the elite troops of the 462th Volks-Grenadier-Division, General McLain, in agreement with the General Walker, decided to suspend the attacks, pending further plans of the General Staff of the 90th Infantry Division. While the troops of the Third US Army sat listening to Marlene Dietrich,Hugh M. Cole: The Lorraine Campaign, Center of Military History, Washington, 1950. p. 190.
Palladino insisted racial prejudice contributed to her opposition to busing, claiming "...don't touch our children and take them out of our schools and send them into an area like Roxbury where the crime is so high". Palladino was also often compared to Hicks, though the two were "temperamentally at odds". Pixie Palladino "confronted her wold with gritty pugnacity", was caustically anticlerical, and rarely hesitated to speak her mind, often "in explicit street language, which earned her the nickname 'Garbage Mouth'". When Monsignor Mimie Pitaro (a state legislator) opposed the repeal of the Racial Imbalance Act, Palladino reportedly "intercepted him outside the chamber and gave him 'the Italian kiss of death' -- three fingers taken to the lips, then quickly moved toward the target".
At 5:00 pm, the 1st Battalion of the same regiment was stopped in its tracks by artillery and small arms. In the southern sector, the 2nd Battalion lost 15 officers and 117 men under heavy fire from mortars and automatic weapons from the buffer strip. At nightfall, the battalion advanced only 200 meters. Seeing that the Americans gradually ate away at their lines, the German artillery redoubled its fire, managing to contain the two regiments, and raising fears with General McLain of a new counterattack. Before the pugnacity of the elite troops of the 462th Volks-Grenadier-Division, General McLain, in agreement with the General Walker, decided to suspend the attacks, pending further plans of the General Staff of the 90th Infantry Division.
The New York Times called Kislyak "the most prominent, if politically radioactive, ambassador in Washington." According to a Times profile in March 2017, "He has interacted with American officials for decades and been a fixture on the Washington scene for the past nine years, jowly and cordial with an easy smile and fluent if accented English, yet a pugnacity in advocating Russia's assertive policies." According to a profile in Politico, people who know Kislyak describe the ambassador "as intelligent but an unyielding advocate for the Kremlin line." As the veteran ambassador to the United States, Kislyak became the subject of intense scrutiny and media coverage in 2017 in the wake of allegations that Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and that he held meetings with top advisers to then president-elect Donald Trump.
According to Chrétien, in 1842 they were producing four types of fabric: farmers' sheets and Cadiz sheets made from local wool were supplied to the cantons of Briouze and Putanges and the region around Domfront; sheets from wool and cotton striped in various colours, called Saint-Lô; and a coloured fabric on cotton thread, called African, which adorned the countrywomen of the cantons of Ecouché, Briouze, Carrouges, Mortrée, Argentan and Trun. Chrétien mentions a mechanical spinning-mill employing 40 men, 20 children and 5 spinsters, plus 3 tanneries and 2 tawers (leather-dressers). These products were offered for sale in Great Hall in the Market Place. Écouché market The people of Écouché are business-minded and their pugnacity, well known in the region, earned them some nicknames considered not very flattering.
As a set-off to this list Barlow noted Freeman's dogmatism, pugnacity and indifference to various subjects he considered irrelevant to his survey of 11th century England: theology, philosophy, and most of the arts. Freeman went on to publish a history of The Reign of William Rufus (1882), in two volumes. He also wrote a series of works on the Anglo-Saxon and Norman periods aimed at a popular readership: Old English History for Children, a work he had had in mind since before he began the History of the Norman Conquest, was published in 1869; A Short History of the Norman Conquest in 1880; and William the Conqueror in 1888. In 1974 J. W. Burrow produced an abridged edition of the History of the Norman Conquest of England.
As described in its war diary, "the battle thickened...the Germans forces...hit back with a pugnacity which had not been encountered in the enemy for a long time". The Régiment de Maisoneuve was halted 1,000 yards from their target while the next day, The Black Watch of Canada was stopped in its attempt. On October 9, the Germans counter-attacked and pushed the Canadians back. The war diary of the 85th Infantry Division reported that they were "making very slow progress" in face of tenacious Canadian resistance.Copp, Terry & Vogel, Robert, Maple Leaf Route: Scheldt, Alma: Maple Leaf Route, 1985 page 31 Back at SHAEF headquarters, Admiral Ramsay, who was more concerned about the problems facing the Canadians than their own generals, complained to Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight Eisenhower that the Canadians were having to ration ammunition as Montgomery made holding the Arnhem salient his main priority.
The story starts with Chamberlain's 1938 triumphant return to 10 Downing Street, a public hero after the signing of the Munich Agreement with Adolf Hitler, declaring "peace in our time." The story ends with the fall of the Chamberlain Government, and the appointment of Churchill as Prime Minister. Churchill, relegated to the periphery of British politics by the late 1930s, lashes out against appeasement despite having almost no support from fellow parliamentarians or the British press. The novel includes many of the momentous historical personages of the day: Chamberlain, the ailing and pacifist Prime Minister; Churchill, the political outcast, whose pugnacity created opprobrium in the public eye; Joseph Kennedy, the U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James's; Guy Burgess, an alcoholic BBC journalist of later Cold War infamy; the machiavellian newspaper mogul Max Aitken (Lord Beaverbrook), and the stuttering and insecure King George VI, who personally detests Churchill and tries to persuade his good friend, Lord Halifax, to take the reins of leadership.

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