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"point of departure" Definitions
  1. Nautical
  2. the precise location of a vessel, established in order to set a course, especially in beginning a voyage in open water.
  3. a place to begin, as in a discussion, argument, etc.

166 Sentences With "point of departure"

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

So Mostaganem's beautiful, still-wild coastline is a point of departure.
A sharper point of departure is reining in Wall Street excesses: Mrs.
"The jewel itself is the journey's end, not the point of departure."
Her lyrics were definitely our point of departure for working on the album.
This detail becomes Ganesh's narrative point of departure to comment on civilizational hubris.
But it only served as a point of departure for what came next.
This tragedy is the point of departure for Ehsan Khoshbakht's archival documentary Filmfarsi.
This may be the most significant point of departure between the film and book.
Stewart's book is an excellent point of departure when appreciating what Howe has accomplished.
In "Ku In Tuo Muah," Mr. Chavis takes breath as a point of departure.
"The point of departure for the U.K. is 'We are exceptional,' " the official said, sighing.
But since the first parade in 1926, the foyer has been its point of departure.
"My point of departure is that he is human and deserves to live," she continued.
" The Quran, he said, was a "point of departure and not a point of arrival.
The 1990 season represented a giant step down from that already low point of departure.
Harris's point of departure is to treat the wars in Iraq and Syria as one conflict.
Mr. Miscione used the alligator legend as a point of departure to recount other urban legends.
Actual value of Grand Prize may vary based on point of departure and air transportation rate fluctuations.
So that for me was the point of departure for coming up with the title for the collection.
All outgoing flights were halted, and arriving planes were held on the ground at their point of departure.
Both use the story of "Daphnis and Chloe" as their point of departure — one literal and one abstract.
I like to say that all my biographies are only the point of departure for getting the complete picture.
The exhibition takes as a point of departure a 1977 self-published autobiographical work by Tàpies called Memòria personal.
Six percent were of Peruvian origin and two percent were of an unknown point of departure, the report shows.
This time "finding beauty in the dark" was her point of departure, as stated in a post-show email.
Serebrennikov's point of departure seems to be that human nature is essentially unchanged from Boccaccio's age to our own.
Traub's point of departure is that the strength of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal coalition derived primarily from white voters.
Jewett is also experimenting in two dimensions by using her sculpture photography as a point of departure for digital prints.
Yes, but that wasn't a goal to meet—more of a lead that I used as a point of departure.
Tunisia has become a major point of departure for many migrants amid tighter controls to prevent boat crossings from Libya.
For Kippenberger, however, the ideological construct of the "self" was less a point of interrogation than a point of departure.
"The use of the landscape as a point of departure for making abstract art is intriguing to me," Lippincott stated.
"What interested us was to talk about migration from the point of departure, not their arrival," Ms. Pouchard Serra said.
That's a shame, because "Les Sauvages" could be a fascinating point of departure for exploring 18th-century attitudes toward colonization.
A point of departure for many New Yorkers seeking seasonal entertainment, this train station will temporarily become a destination itself.
This is the fascinating, if unorthodox, point of departure for Tarantallegra, an ongoing group exhibition at Lower East Side gallery, HESTER.
The launchpad is ready and waiting; it could soon be the point of departure for tourists looking to touch the sky.
Carlos: Our curatorial process began by considering Thomas Paine's influential political pamphlet "Common Sense" from 1776 as a point of departure.
They might take a favorite item of clothing as a point of departure, or dress like their best version of themselves.
But the plot, as exotic as it might seem, is only the point of departure for a more far-reaching journey.
His point of departure was fallen-tree sightings close to home in Mount Baldy, a mountain village east of Los Angeles.
Ms. Chaker's point of departure is poems written by Syrian, Iraqi and Palestinian writers whose political messages are sublimated in metaphors.
The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said on its website that air traffic to LAX was being delayed at the point of departure.
Many experts have pointed to Delaware's chief justice Leo Strine's past guidance as a point of departure on the business judgement rule.
Here, Young's point of departure is Bertolt Brecht's 1948 version, which explores, among other things, social resistance and the current political climate.
The relationship between artist and architectural space is the point of departure for Ecco Domus, a group exhibition at Jersey City's Art House.
As we move forward, we take as our point of departure the open letter signed by 400 writers, scholars, and artists last May.
Yeah. The production side comes before the melody, it comes before the lyrics—and all the songs have a different point of departure.
She has always taken as her point of departure that place where most narratives conclude: the wedding ceremony, the birth of a child.
We hope his luridly described murder by lynching proves more than a mere point of departure for Henderson's sprawling Southern Gothic family drama.
Next, climate change woven into the sustainable planet theme is a powerful pathway for curiosity — the point of departure to all scientific thinking.
"Despite decades of research, betrayal as a point of departure has delivered nothing conclusive," Ronald Leopold, executive director of the Anne Frank House, said.
It's meant as sort of a point of departure for thinking about the ways we construct gender and sexuality in our own contemporary society.
And while emerging markets remain less correlated than developed ones, the trend is in the same direction, with perhaps a later point of departure.
Instead of simply lamenting Cape Foulweather's "ghosted landscape," he tries to use it as a point of departure for imagining what might come next.
In this exhibition, the point of departure is 1960, when Ms. Halprin, the revered dancer and educator, taught an experimental workshop in Northern California.
In four months from now, they are likely to sweep the European parliamentary elections, creating, they hope, a point of departure to a new Europe.
Taking the traditional 'glossy' as a point of departure, it is a space to play with gender, sexuality, and identity, rather than dictate their terms.
The project takes as a point of departure the idea of the mythical Greek god Hermes, the god of commerce, theft, music, and border crossings.
These two true stories are the point of departure for Embrace of the Serpent, a film by the 193-year-old Colombian director Ciro Guerra.
She's frustrated that she can't even get to a point of departure for a reasoned discussion with her dad, a strong supporter of President Trump.
The cost of docking services in Rosario, the point of departure for 80 percent of Argentina's agricultural exports, is about $108,000 per vessel, according to Metz.
This essay does not answer those questions, but if offers a cursory point of departure for thinking about lines of interrogation that lead towards possible answers.
"Last Point of Departure (LPD) airports, which fly directly to the United States, are attractive terrorist targets because they are seen as vulnerable," the document says.
I have gone to Turkey, stopping in Istanbul, Gaziantep and Izmir, a main point of departure for many refugees making the journey across the Aegean Sea.
Conversely, if you are in Montreal and want to take a metaphorical cab ride to Beirut, then Garage Beirut would be the ideal point of departure.
Her latest project, "Memoirs of a … Unicorn," takes a turn toward personal history, with stories of her Arkansas-born father's life as a point of departure.
The exhibition draws inspiration from Ann Arbor's legacy of social movements and experimental art practices from the late-1950s to the 183s as its point of departure.
We're seeing an increasing number of businesses take the development of privacy technology as a direct point of departure, along with the value of individual data control.
The main point of departure, thanks to the juvenile influence of Rogen (who directed the premiere with collaborator Evan Goldberg), involves upping the ante on blue humor.
The point of departure for Versions seemed to be located around the margins of this topic — the way VR ruffles the familiar rapport between users and media.
Their stout silhouettes, familiar from Anderson's Midwestern childhood, became a point of departure for him, too, as did the Bechers' ability to imbue inanimate objects with personality.
The museum will serve as a point of departure for tours of the Médoc, the historic area encompassing the famous areas of Margaux, St.-Julien and Pauillac.
Whether that can be achieved through the Trump Administration's "fair and reciprocal trade policies" remains to be seen, but that is certainly a good point of departure.
Then they were once again blindfolded and driven back to their original point of departure, according to aides who saw him in three of the past five years.
He spoke as the bloc is gearing up for a summit on Monday with Turkey, the point of departure for the vast majority of people heading to Europe.
I'm polite about it, and I think it's being diligent as much as O.C.D. People don't realize this, but most bags go missing at the point of departure.
That is an excellent point of departure in a difficult confidence building process that should lead to the common objective of a nuclear-free and peaceful Korean Peninsula.
This season her point of departure was her friendship with Todd Alden, an artist and gallery owner, with whom she shares, among other things, some pronounced magpie tendencies.
"The point of departure was to explore personal wounds, family wounds, but also wounds that I shared collectively with the whole country and maybe with humanity," he said.
They have again focused their collection around the white button-down shirt — which they use as a point of departure in everything from floor-sweeping gowns to cocktail dresses.
His ascension is not so much an alarming new point of departure as a useful opportunity for people to open their eyes to what's been happening for a while.
San Francisco now is a point of departure globally in a very different way, through the Internet and Silicon Valley and what is developing in terms of artificial intelligence.
A painting titled "December 24, 2016" (2018), for example, isn't necessarily a painting of a digital sketch Butler made that day, but that sketch was its point of departure.
Qassem said all the boats were found near the western coastal city of Sabratha, the most common point of departure for migrants attempting to cross from Libya during recent months.
Who's affected: A TSA spokesperson told Axios "all individuals, international passengers and U.S. citizens" will be impacted by these changes, on international flights U.S.-bound from a last point of departure.
On the other hand, the single is also a point of departure for the band: After all these years, Comeback Kid has gone separate ways with the iconic label Victory Records.
The border officer ordered that he be deported back to Northern Iraq -- a place that he has no personal connection to whatsoever, besides it being his most recent point of departure.
A DHS official said the first phase of the new measures has been applied to more than 280 last-point-of-departure airports throughout the world, as well as 180 airlines.
"The new security measures put in place by the TSA at high risk Last Point of Departure airports are a clear response to the ever-changing threats that we face," said Rep.
But we have a great point of departure with the already strong economic ties between our economies and the fact that our respective consumer and environmental standards are at comparably high levels.
Neither the prosperous nations of Western and Northern Europe, where the refugees want to settle, nor Turkey, their point of departure for the Continent, are living up to their promises of help.
There's nothing wrong with speaking Spanish on national television in the United States, but O'Rourke's approach failed because his gesture came off as inauthentic and lacking a genuine emotional point of departure.
Azimi: Richard, I know you saw "Tight Right White," which took a 1970s exploitation film that is itself based on a racist pulp novel from the 1950s as its point of departure.
This is Hägglund's point of departure, and it leads him through the history of religious and political ideas and finally to a deep critique of capitalism and the values that undergird it.
The point of departure for her works are journalistic photographs published in Colombian tabloids such as El Tiempo and Vanguardia Liberal, from which she extracts images of human bodies and paints their silhouettes.
Using the magazines as a point of departure, the exhibition will highlight how these five artists have helped shape the gallery's program as a way to introduce Los Angeles audiences to the gallery.
Most of them take inspiration from John Cage; they understand his legendary work "4′33″," in which the performer remains silent, not as a conceptual conundrum but as a practical point of departure.
Using landscape symbolism as a point of departure, he combines Euclidean geometric shapes with a multiplicity of moving images, whether filmed, photographed, painted, or drawn, that unite representation and abstraction into a common aesthetic.
If you want a short-cut, and a good point of departure in that kind of analysis, you may wish to think of China's widely shared medium-term growth forecast of about 6 percent.
Niger President Mahamadou Issoufou urged the G7 to take urgent measures to end the crisis in Libya - the point of departure for hundreds of thousands of migrants looking for a better life in Europe.
In the decades since, DeCarava's work has become a visual point of departure for directors including Barry Jenkins and Kahlil Joseph, who take visual cues from DeCarava's oeuvre and engage them in new ways.
Recognized internationally for his kaleidoscopic explorations of the black experience, Mr. Adams, 21940, who is African-American, is the first major visual artist to use the Green Books as a creative point of departure.
Painting is the be-all and end-all of Mr. Hockney's art, the point of departure of his forays into other pictorial realms and the port to which he inevitably returns, discoveries in hand.
Ms. Colker's point of departure is João Cabral de Melo Neto's 1950 poem of the same name, which is inspired by the Capibaribe River in northeastern Brazil and the social disparity in that region.
Viewed from either Emmott's or Waldron's point of departure — the necessity of preserving an open society or of respecting the moral equality of human beings — the surge toward widening inequality is endangering the West.
Scope of impact  All individuals who are traveling to the United States from a last point of departure airport will be subject to the new screening protocols, whether they are U.S. citizens or not.
Even though use of the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) study to derive a point of departure was criticized by the [EPA] FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel, EPA continues to rely on this study.
Rivaled only by Ibsen, and perhaps Hamsun, Munch exists in Norwegian culture as a sign of greatness, and it may be helpful for readers in English to understand this reality as a point of departure.
Her point of departure this season, she said, was the youth of the artist and gallery owner Todd Alden, a friend whose late '80s style might best be characterized as New Wave-renegade-slacker-preppy.
In a recently-opened solo exhibition, King Within A King at Deli Gallery, Roach uses family photography as a point of departure to interrogate his personal history, memory, and the limitations of a static image.
In the front room at Cohan is "The Living Need Light, the Dead Need Music," a 21-minute film that takes as its point of departure the fantastical funeral rites of the Mekong Delta in Vietnam.
But the composer Michael Hersch saw hell as a point of departure when writing "a breath upwards," which received its New York premiere at Saint Peter's Church in Manhattan on Friday evening, presented by Lex54 Concerts.
Despite having used a rhinestone-studded white glove for the Vuitton show's invitation, Mr. Abloh's objective, he said, was never to replicate the costumed Jackson but to use a deconstructed icon as a point of departure.
Set to a score by the electronic musician Lesley Flanigan, the dance explores death and the underworld — its point of departure is the myth of Demeter and Persephone — specifically the role that women play in mortality.
Instead, Libya has emerged as a key point of departure for hundreds of thousands of migrants, as human traffickers capitalize on the power vacuum created by the overthrow and killing of Muammar el-Qaddafi in 2011.
" Fanlore, the wiki of record for all things fandom, says fan fiction must be "a work of fiction written by fans for other fans, taking a source text or a famous person as a point of departure.
Critics have hailed these books, which are the first volumes of a trilogy, as a "reinvention" of the novel, and they are certainly a point of departure for it, one at which fiction merges with oral history.
All told, the exhibition summarily underscores the need for examining the UAE's recent past in the context of the present, and establishes a point of departure for anyone interested in the recent art history of the region.
"If in exchange for the legal faculty for an orderly debt restructuring a supervision board is necessary, neither its point of departure nor its conclusion can be the assassination of Puerto Rican democracy," said Puerto Rico Gov.
"The point of departure will be to lower the first (tax) band," said Bitonci, a member of the League party, which made the introduction of the flat tax a key part of its election manifesto earlier this year.
That book, which Diaz keeps on a bookshelf in her kitchen, protected inside a freezer bag, would become the point of departure for her own cookbook, filled with stories about her Tata and other women in her family.
Crawford had a stint as a disciple of the cultish composer-philosopher Dane Rudhyar, and her first mature pieces, a series of searching and austere piano preludes, take the mystical chromaticism of Scriabin as a point of departure.
Have We Met: Dialogues on Memory and Desire draws inspiration from Ann Arbor's legacy of social movements (Anti-War Movement, Civil RightsMovements) and experimental art practices (The Once Group) from the late-1950s to the 1970s as its point of departure.
The death toll, which is expected to rise to nearly 300, reflects the mounting economic pressure on Egyptians as well as a possible shift away from Libya as a point of departure for migrants headed to Europe, migrant aid workers said.
That problem is the point of departure for Death and Other Holidays, the poet Marci Vogel's debut novella, a coming-of-age story that centers on the recent death of the narrator's stepfather, and the less recent death of her father.
This is a promising point of departure for play about mass hysteria and the demonization of women, yet the director doesn't dig any deeper into questions of female agency and representation in the three and a half hours that follow.
The bedlam has slashed the country's oil production, drained much of its sovereign wealth, offered havens to Islamist militants and turned its long Mediterranean coast into a major point of departure for African and Middle Eastern migrants fleeing to Europe.
This famous exchange serves as the point of departure for Traveling Lady, an ambitious performance by Colombian-born artist Jessica Mitrani that celebrates female defiance while taking a tongue-in-cheek approach to examine the societal expectations of women today.
Since July, there has been a sharp drop in departures from the Libyan coast, in part because of a shift in strategy of militias that control the region around Sabratha, the main point of departure for migrant boats for the past two years.
Since July, there has been a sharp drop in departures from the Libyan coast, in part because of a shift in strategy of militias that control the region around Sabratha, the main point of departure for migrant boats for the past two years .
It's prepared to pursue negotiations and engage its enemies, often in secret, through multiple channels, for months -- chasing significant payoffs that seem highly unlikely at the point of departure and risk backfiring domestically and making the geopolitical status quo worse if they fail.
China, for its part, must understand that its balanced trade accounts with the U.S. are a point of departure for a constructive relationship that both countries can live with – and that could be of enormous benefit to the rest of the world.
This matters because what might be called the legitimacy of the modern era, which emerged in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, is a question that often takes as its point of departure that gaunt monk nailing his theses to a church door.
The point of departure was Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, a small stretch of land between First and Second Avenues in the 40s, which has been a popular site of mass demonstration for many years, and one for which the city has often granted permits.
A key point of departure here is the study I published in 2012 with Columbia University public health Professor Merlin Chowkwanyun, explicating how what we call the "disparitarian perspective" has distorted discussion of the impact of the New Deal on black Americans.
Mrs May's vapid sloganeering—"Brexit means Brexit" and the rest of it—grated on European ears as much as British ones, but her point of departure was clear enough: a "hard" Brexit in which Britain will leave the EU's single market and its customs union.
But the exhibition is just a point of departure for a larger dialog about the objectification and commodification of the body, as well as a kind of "where are we now?" discussion of the male form (and, by extension, the female form) in art.
Turkey's Incirlik Air Base is a key point of departure for US airstrikes and drone operations, and as the power outage following the coup continued, Pentagon officials began to express concern about keeping up the pace of missions relying on power supplied from a generator.
"We told President (Hassan) Rouhani what the parameters of a pause could be and we're waiting for a response from the Iranians, but their point of departure is relatively far because they are demanding the immediate lifting of sanctions," said a French presidential official.
"There are several apps that you can get on your smartphone or computer where you can track civilian planes from the point of departure right through to arrival," said Norman Shanks, who once served as chief of security at Britain's former largest airport operator.
This concern is enhanced by the bloc's tense relationship with Turkey (a country that, in many cases, acts as a gatekeeper preventing migrants from places like Syria making it to Europe) and the prolonged instability in Libya (a significant point of departure for irregular migrants).
To be fair, if all had gone as it looked like it would at my point of departure — single, no health care, a somewhat unstable nonprofit job in the city with the highest rents in the country — then I might be writing a different essay right now.
Late breaking on Sunday, SADC issued a statement offering support for a recount of the vote, a welcome point of departure from its past position, but then in the same breath, called for a government of national unity, which is a lethal blow to democratic intent.
Using that piece as his point of departure, Mr. Nauman has created seven large-scale video projections with sound in a new work that will be presented in September at the Sperone Westwater gallery in Manhattan and, in slightly different form, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Lawmakers agreed by voice vote to back the bill, which would direct the Transportation Security Administration to establish a plan to enhance passenger and airline safety at Last Point of Departure (LPD) airports, or foreign airports with nonstop flights to the U.S. View the discussion thread.
"Good as Gone," by the Austin-based Amy Gentry, takes as its point of departure the all-too-real "gone girl" Elizabeth Smart, abducted from her own bed by a mysterious man at knife point, her forced march into the unknown witnessed by a younger sister.
Our point of departure is the recognition that for many supporters of Hillary Clinton, this is a time of mourning -- mourning that the glass ceiling of a female United States President was not shattered; mourning that their "champion" was defeated; mourning that their dream for America has gone awry.
Style tropes from Northwest skate-rat culture were a point of departure for Derek Buse and Jo Sadler of the Los Angeles-based CWST, whose determinedly raggedy collection of "hobo chic" sportswear had the so-wrong-it's-right look one associates with the best Japanese men's wear design.
Play Coloring Book up against Dropout, however, and the difference is clear: Chance is even cuter and cuddlier than West, having taken West's style as his own, nicer model, just as West took Puff Daddy and dozens of lesser crossover rappers as his own respective point of departure.
MS: In order to orient towards what to do about it — and this is actually emblematic of what, I do know the point of departure in most therapies, which, when I was a student, one of my 90 year old supervisors said, people come into therapy with a mess.
Here Hays is focused on a point of departure — first in a flashback when he drops her off at college, later when his dementia leads him to mistake a witness's daughter for his own — and it seems possible that this may have been his last happy memory of her.
In acknowledging my great debt to Gallant in my interview with my editor, my aim was to make my intentions clear: to use Gallant's classic story of self-exile in postwar Europe as a point of departure for an exploration of the immigrant experience of Pakistani Muslims in today's America.
The rules require that 280 airports that are the last point of departure for flights to the United States have explosive-detection technology, such as devices that can detect bomb residue on passengers' hands, in place within weeks, according to a memo the International Air Transport Association sent to airlines on Wednesday.
Not long afterward, Mr. Marks began a new project, the pop monodrama "Headphone Splitter," which takes a lightly fictionalized account of their date as its point of departure: The characters Matt and Baby cozily split headphones on the B41 to go bird-watching on a lazy Saturday, and witness a brutal ax murder.
On the 70th anniversary of the end of the war in Europe last year, my husband, a political commentator for The Wall Street Journal, used it as a point of departure to interview my father — who turned 11 on V-E Day — about his wartime memories and to reflect the tensions facing 21st-century Europe.
A look back at an archetypal example of conceptual art, René Magritte's 13 painting "La Trahison des Images" or "The Treachery of Images," or "This Is Not a Pipe" — a parodic image of a pipe and a written denunciation that declares the image not to be the thing itself — signals Reichek's point of departure.
Needy individuals, who may be unaccompanied minors, elderly, sick or in immediate danger of persecution, are identified at the point of departure (for example, a refugee camp in Lebanon) and then flown in safety to a European destination where they receive "humanitarian visas" and are helped to seek long-term asylum and adapt to their host country.
The latest addition, edited by Roxana Marcoci, Senior Photography Curator, Ana Janevski, Curator of Performance and Media, and Ksenia Nouril, former C-MAP fellow for Central and Eastern Europe, takes the revolutionary years between 1989 and 1991 as a point of departure to bring focus to the legacy of socialism in artists' practices and cultural production.
Issued by her publishing platform and record label Shelter Press, which she collaborates on with her partner Bartolomé Sanson, A Forest Petrifies: Diamond Feedback presents Atkinson's literary work as both an aside and a companion to her music practice which has developed over the last half decade, acting as a point of departure for her lyrics and recent records and exhibitions.
"[A]s we aim to reduce driver incentives to improve our financial performance, we expect driver dissatisfaction will generally increase," Uber's S-20173 stated, marking a rare public acknowledgment of the company's fundamental labor dilemma: As it continues to squeeze costs to its bottom line by cutting wages, it risks upsetting its 3 million drivers in 65 countries to the point of departure.
Yet a world is taking form that wants you never to be lost, never to feel displaced, never to be unanchored, never to be unable to photograph yourself, never to stand in awe before mystery, never to exit your safety zone (or only in managed fashion), never to leave your life behind: a world where you travel for 24 hours to your point of departure.
Murphy is a valid point of departure due to the decisive role it played in Gironcoli's evolution — he adopted its title for one of his early sculptures, a cast aluminum piece with a silver finish inside of a black vitrine, which includes the stylized forms of a figure, a bed or chaise, and an inverted umbrella ("Model in Vitrine, Design for a Figure [Murphy]," 1968).
MS: That sounds like Mother Nature's ability to still get us to stop and pause and slow down and just pay attention, which is at its most fundamental, elemental level what we need in some sense, and is always the point of departure for good psychotherapy, which is like, how can we find a place to really been seen as we see each other and to notice what that feels like?
He also enters into dialogue with the work of others through acts of memory, as when he movingly recalls walking through the streets of Paris with the composer Ivan Tcherepnin, or by the homage he pays to his fellow creators — homage conceived in the widest sense, not necessarily as praise but rather as an occasion to use what another artist has done, often in a different medium, as a point of departure.
"I hereby direct all persons whose point of departure originates from outside the State of Florida in an area with substantial community spread, to include the New York Tri-State Area (Connecticut, New Jersey and New York), and entering the State of Florida through airports to isolate or quarantine for a period of 14 days from the time of entry into the State of Florida or the duration of the person's presence in the State of Florida, whichever is shorter," the executive order says.

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