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88 Sentences With "spellbound by"

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

Preeti appears to be too spellbound by his aura to object.
Trump as a holy roller, spellbound by the mysteries of faith?
To read Colette's literature is to be spellbound by its emotional nakedness and authenticity.
Still, she was spellbound by art: She read about it voraciously, and began writing about it.
These lawmakers are, too often, spellbound by the very agencies and departments they are charged with policing.
Glued to his couch, he's spellbound by the proceedings even though it's well into the 14th round.
Staggered lines and irregular rhymes offer little reprieve from a world spellbound by despair and pervasive violence.
As it turned out, the only person who wasn't spellbound by the perfect 10 was Nadia Comaneci herself.
Jardim had been spellbound by the Barcelona team that claimed the Champions League under Pep Guardiola in 2009.
I first discovered her channel when it was linked to on Reddit, and quickly became spellbound by her technique.
Emde, though, is part of the first generation spellbound by a media-driven culinary wave: the Food Network was ascendant.
Fans, critics, and even academics, spellbound by the band's music, have taken the bait and delivered one overwrought interpretation after another.
They came from humble roots, made a fortune in the 22008s in meatpacking, then in middle age fell spellbound by art.
In spite of decades of scientific data proving human-caused climate change, we are still spellbound by a story of enlightened progress.
Mr. Paslow voted for Mr. Obama in 2008, spellbound by speeches that he said could make you happy and make you cry.
Scroll through a modern mermaid's Instagram feed, and you'll be spellbound by shot after shot of them gliding effortlessly into the depths.
Adolescent readers tend to be spellbound by the March girls' aspirations and high jinks, not the inner life of their mother (eye roll).
Mr. Biden is an old hand of the party's old guard, cozy with big finance and spellbound by a bygone era of bipartisan amity.
While spellbound by Brett's clean prose and obvious intellect, I finished the book wondering if the follow-through was as masterful as the setup.
It was a monumental moment for my sister and me; we were spellbound by the gymnasts who were only a few years older than us.
The reader is just as spellbound by Lock's story as Edward is by Poe's, the narrator initially wary but eventually surrendering to Poe's infectiously morbid fiction.
I was spellbound by a team of Amazonian women in red kilts kicking their legs so high and with such attack that it left me breathless.
"In one concert, I had a little girl stand right in front of me and look absolutely spellbound by the singing," Mr. Smith wrote in an email.
Russian fans are spellbound by the surprise success of the national team which has advanced to the quarter finals despite being the lowest ranked side in the tournament.
The most favorable interpretation of Graham's actions is that he's not spellbound by Trump in particular, but rather just willing to bow to whoever's in charge in Washington.
Rosalía, whose full name is Rosalía Vila Tobella, was 13 when she first became spellbound by the music of Camarón de la Isla — a legendary Spanish Romani flamenco singer.
Rather than being spellbound by our feelings about the world's biggest companies, American cities need to find ways to build local economies in a way that works for everyone.
After two years of trying to figure out what to do with my life, I visited Chicago one weekend, and was absolutely spellbound by the gorgeous architecture all around me.
And we couldn't have ever predicted that our current crop of students would be just as spellbound by Ross and Rachel's romance, Monica's lovable neuroses and Joey's passion for sandwiches.
He turned in the driveway and looked at the studio as he finished his song, apparently as spellbound by it as the rest of us—his friends, myself, the photographer.
Mr. Pintilie's puckishness was evident in an interview in which he talked about his films and, with tongue in cheek, about his need to become spellbound by the actresses he cast.
No one on the London Fashion Week schedule garners an end-of-show reaction quite like Ashish, and he (once again) left us completely spellbound by his witches, shining stars, and hopeful dream for the future.
" It's hard to imagine future generations not being haunted and spellbound by Cave's gravelly wails and ghastly whispers on "Loverman," the evil sneers of "Red Right Hand," or the ferocious howls of "From Her to Eternity.
Spellbound by the ice, he reveled in the presence of a giant of being, the great ice bear, a creature he had once molded into a clay figurine incarnating all the marvel and joy of childhood.
At first the UK press was spellbound by their deeply pensive, effects-laden music, but as shoegaze began to fall out of fashion for being too isolated and cold, Slowdive took the brunt of the bad press.
This week, the Internet is spellbound by a set of Harry Potter-themed newborn photos — most notably featuring a little Gryffindor wearing ear protectors to shield him from the deadly cries of his newborn brother, a Mandrake.
While children are spellbound by beignets and bowling to live "swamp pop," a Creole/Cajun/rockabilly musical genre unique to Louisiana, parents can stealthily work in discourse on colonialism and position "Nouvelle Orleans" as a microcosm of the melting pot called America.
" Around the same time young Arthur was helping lay the cornerstone for today's "yoga-industrial complex," he was attending Columbia, where he became spellbound by the works of Edward Carpenter, a hardcore socialist poet/philosopher now known as the "Walt Whitman of England" and the "Gay Godfather of the British Left.
It is not uncommon anymore for anti-Trump conservatives like National Review's Charles C. W. Cooke to perfunctorily assert that "Obama begat Trumpism" without taking the trouble to explain what Obama did, other than simply to be who he is, to cause nearly half of the Republican electorate to become spellbound by a bigoted demagogue.
And so it happened that in the summer of 43, as the New York art world was becoming spellbound by the emotionally cool attitudes of Pop Art, Minimalism, and Color Field painting, Gross was studying with Kokoschka – someone the chest-thumping New York art world had long ago consigned to a small, inconsequential corner of art history.
Like numerous adherents before and after—the American poet-critics J. V. Cunningham and R. P. Blackmur, the English poet-critics Thom Gunn and Donald Davie, and the future U.S. Poet Laureates Robert Hass, Robert Pinsky, Philip Levine, and Donald Hall—Williams had been spellbound by Winters's authoritative tone and by a set of absolutist convictions relating not just to Anglophone poetry but to literature as a whole.
Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, p. 526 (Translation by James Vincent Murphy). A comprehensive critique of the film industry was published by the Nazi economist Hans Buchner in 1927 with the title "Spellbound by Movies. The Global Dominance of the Cinema".
At school, he was spellbound by the works of British poet and activist Edward Carpenter, who left a profound impact on his views and drove him to drop out. After leaving school, he married Charlotte Wilson in 1922, but they were divorced ten years later.
He was spellbound by its beauty and constructed a mosque in Samarkand in Mawarannahr imitating the design of this Masjid. This mosque is also known to be the place where Imad ul Mulk, a Mughal Prime Minister, got the Emperor Alamgir II murdered in 1759 AD.
Ludon sings along and signals to each of the 24 children to perform a solo. Eve and her children are spellbound by the performance and erupt in wild cheers and whistles when it is over. Ludon suggests to Eve that their children should play together, and she agrees.
Subsequently, he begins to write and dedicate poetry to her, and enchanted by his charm, she reciprocates. Soon after, for the first time ever, she steps out of Gadi — with Raju — and finds herself spellbound by the beauty of the world outside. Thereafter, she begins frequenting the outdoors with Raju.
"Spellbound" by Siouxsie and the Banshees was a favourite song of the director, who sought to include it. Marshall also hoped to include the song "Into the Light" by the Banshees, but it was left out due to the producer disliking it and the cost being too high to licence it.
70 In 1931, Meher Baba made the first of many visits to the West, where he attracted followers.Kalchuri (1986) p. 1405ff Throughout most of the 1940s, Meher Baba worked with a category of spiritual aspirants called masts,Donkin (2001) p. vi who he said are entranced or spellbound by internal spiritual experiences.
Spellbound by Margit Sandemo (the first book in the Sagan om Isfolket series, translated as The Legend of the Ice People) was published in English in the UK by The Tagman Press on 30 June 2008. Sandemo came to London to promote its publication. Five additional books from the series were also published in 2008.
When he finds the beauty of Himalaya, he is spellbound by nature and sings his heart out. Putta Joisa finds his old employer, clothed in rags and singing on a ghaat. He helps Vishwanath regain memory. Meanwhile, Toogudeepa sweet-talks Vishwanath's three sons into handing over the ancestral property and takes over Vishwanath's property.
The film's original title alternated between Have You Heard? and Every Word Is True. The fictional singer portrayed by Gwyneth Paltrow was originally intended to be Peggy Lee. The situation of an audience being held spellbound by a performer falling silent in the middle of a song was based on a real-life nightclub performance by Barbara Cook.
Suddenly the Saxon men return, victims of a surprise Danish raid, led by Harald. He orders Armel to reveal the location of his hoard, and when Armel refuses, Harald prepares to execute him. Gwendoline begs him to spare her father; spellbound by her, Harald commands everyone to leave. Gwendoline sings a spinning song and succeeds in getting him to spin.
In the 1940s he took classes with Helene Kirsova and appeared in a number of productions by the Kirsova Ballet. Robinson was a distinguished poet and writer who spent his later years in Lake Macquarie. He was a magical storyteller; his booming, lyrical voice, and shock of white flowing hair inspired and excited his audiences. Children sat spellbound by his aboriginal tales and wonderful verses.
A friend visits and sees Mak living with Nak. The villagers, knowing she had died months earlier, realize Mak is spellbound by her ghost. But those who attempt to tell him are killed in the night by Nak's ghost, who is desperate to stay with her husband. When Mak confronts Nak about the rumors, she lies and says the villagers disliked her after he left for the war.
The master puppeteer, Gaspare Grisini, is so expert at manipulating his stringed puppets that they appear alive. Clara Wintermute, the only child of a wealthy doctor, is spellbound by Grisini's act and invites him to entertain at her birthday party. Seeing his chance to make a fortune, Grisini accepts and makes a splendidly gaudy entrance with caravan, puppets, and his two orphaned assistants. Lizzie Rose and Parsefall are dazzled by the Wintermute home.
The first people they meet are two craftsmen, who are very aloof and do not give them any good information. The Westerner expresses his frustration, and Iida suggests they meet the foreman in charge of the camp, who has the title toryō. Iida makes the toryō seem like a demi-god who makes every single decision. Instead, when they finally meet him, they are struck and spellbound by his simplicity and knowledge.
With deliberate irony, Ruggles bemoans his fate as having been relegated to America, "the land of slavery," after having his employment change hands with no input from himself. A key part of the film is Laughton’s recitation of the Gettysburg Address in a saloon filled with rough Western characters held spellbound by the speech. By the end of the film Ruggles finds a way of making a new life for himself on his own terms.
She is unexpectedly spellbound by the stories and confused when she realises the book contains only twelve stories. Where is the thirteenth tale? Intrigued, Margaret agrees to meet with the ageing author—if only to discuss her reasons for not accepting the position as Winter's biographer. During their meeting at Winter's home, Lea attempts to politely decline the offer and leave, but is stopped at the door by the pleas of the older woman.
During summers, she taught abroad at venues in Denmark and Sweden. As a writer, she published critiques and articles on dance for newspapers and magazines, as well as her autobiography, Rytmin lumoissa (Spellbound by Rhythm, 1950). Gripenberg's work was recognized by three medals from Finland. She received the participation medal for the War for Freedom, 1939/40 and was awarded the Pro Finlandia Medal of the Order of the Lion of Finland in 1951.
The king was spellbound by Santhumala's beauty and swiftly married her, promoting her to the rank of first queen. Jealous of the king's favoritism, the Twelve Sisters were not kind to the new queen. Although they were polite to her in front of the king, they were often mean to her in private. To take her revenge from the Twelve Sisters, Santhumala, the favorite queen, feigned sickness and the king became worried.
Several commentators remarked on how captivating the seminars were and how eloquently Reich spoke. According to a Danish newspaper in 1934: > The moment he starts to speak, not at the lectern, but walking around it on > cat's paws, he is simply enchanting. In the Middle Ages, this man would have > been sent into exile. He is not only eloquent, he also keeps his listeners > spellbound by his sparking personality, reflected in his small, dark > eyes.
The whole song was shot in the Belgian city of Bruges. It was the first Hindi song to be shot in this city. Talking about the location of the song, Hirani stated, "I was spellbound by the picturesque architecture, landscapes, the strong historical background and clean refreshing environs. I decided that this is just the right place to shoot a part of the movie as it fitted in beautifully with the storyline".
The film received screenings in 1961. An anonymous review in the Yogyakarta-based daily Nasional remarked that Djajakusuma had clearly meant to emphasise the dramatic elements of the story and noted that the audience seemed spellbound by the fighting scenes. According to Kompas, Tjambuk Api and Djajakusuma's earlier work Harimau Tjampa (Tiger of Tjampa) are his best-known. The two are those most often shown, owing to the fact that ready-to-use copies are stored at Sinematek Indonesia.
Hedren said that while she was still under contract to Hitchcock, he turned down several film roles on her behalf, and was particularly disappointed when she heard from French director François Truffaut that he had wanted her for his film Fahrenheit 451.Spoto, Donald: Spellbound by Beauty. Three Rivers Press, 2009. p. 187 Truffaut's daughter Laura disputed this, telling Tony Lee Moral her mother had expressed surprise at the mention of Hedren's possible involvement in the project.
He was on his way to the village after serving a prison term and was planning to lay claim on Ponnatha and her wealth. As this would affect the reputation of Malaichami's family, she killed Mayilvaganam on her coracle. Malaichami is spellbound by her sacrifice and takes a vow that he will not die till Kuyil returns and chooses to stay in her hut. In the present, as Malaichami is dying, Kuyil is brought on parole to see him.
The publication of this work and his talents for society brought him into familiar intercourse with Walter Scott, Southey, Campbell, Lockhart, Jerdan, and other distinguished men of letters. He next published Tales of the West, 1828, 2 vols., treating of his native county. Among those who knew him his fame as a story-teller far exceeded his renown as a writer, and social company often gathered round him to be spellbound by some exciting or pathetic narration.
Ascending and Descending by M. C. Escher Escher, in the 1950s, had not yet drawn any impossible figures and was not aware of their existence. Roger Penrose had been introduced to Escher's work at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Amsterdam in 1954. He was "absolutely spellbound" by Escher's work, and on his journey back to England he decided to produce something "impossible" on his own. After experimenting with various designs of bars overlying each other he finally arrived at the impossible triangle.
The Girl is a 2012 British television film directed by Julian Jarrold, written by Gwyneth Hughes and produced by the BBC and HBO Films. The film stars Sienna Miller as Tippi Hedren and Toby Jones as Alfred Hitchcock. It is based on Donald Spoto's 2009 book Spellbound by Beauty: Alfred Hitchcock and His Leading Ladies, which discusses the English film director Hitchcock and the women who played leading roles in his films. The Girls title was inspired by Hitchcock's alleged nickname for Hedren.
Kwai-lan, originally uninterested in martial arts, becomes spellbound by the sport after watching an intense fight between Fei-hung and Fok Koon-wai (Kenny Wong), a Mizongyi practitioner. Fei- hung is a man loved by the people, but his past had not been without causing offense. When Kwai-lan finds out that Ching-lung's father Lui Kong (Dominic Lam) is sick with leprosy, she asks for Fei-hung's help. However, Kong does not appreciate Fei-hung's hospitality and blames him for destroying his family.
Both teams were evenly matched throughout the field. The Irish Independent noted: > Fast, spectacular, open camogie, fine striking and superb ball control by > both side were features of the final. The Irish Times reported: > Form start to finish, the crowd was spellbound by the play of both sides and > it was a pity that one of them had to lose. Agnes Hourigan wrote in the Irish Press: > The players managed to continue to serve up brilliant camogie even as the > ball and the pitch became slippery.
In 1960 Pellicci's family, his father Arthur, mother Jessie and older brother John, emigrated to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia as "Ten Pound Poms". In 1964, his older brother John took the then 11-year-old Pellicci to see The Beatles greet their "sea" of fans from the balcony of Melbourne's Southern Cross Hotel. Pellicci said he was spellbound by the experience and it moulded his career path. Shortly after, John bought him a Trixon drum kit which had been traded in at a local car dealer.
Spellbound by dreams of a lifetime of happiness together, a summer morning inspires 17-year-old Eliza to begin decorating it with swans as a vase. Jess had broken its spell later by asking for his breakfast and she had set it aside unfinished for many years. Then, one November, to console herself after her young daughter Sarah had died, she began working on it again. She had only completed the outline of another swan when Jess, still grieving, came to her for comfort.
155; Robertson was Hitchcock's de facto associate producer, though she was never credited as such.Donald Spoto, Spellbound by Beauty: Alfred Hitchcock and his Leading Ladies, Crown/Archetype 2008: p. 191; Hitchcock relied on Robertson to sift through prospective material for films, and after reading Anthony Boucher's positive review of the novel Psycho in his "Criminals at Large" column, Robertson decided to show the book to Hitchcock, even though studio readers at Paramount Pictures had already rejected its premise for a film. Hitchcock acquired rights to the novel for $9,500Leigh, p.
Sixty-eight-year-old Major Pendleton Talbot and his practical spinster daughter Lydia move to Washington D.C. The Talbots have fallen from their aristocratic past in the South before the American Civil War and are now quite poor. The pair stay at a boarding house in the nation's capital. There they become acquainted with Henry Hopkins Hargraves, an ambitious actor in vaudeville. Hargraves is seemingly spellbound by the Major's tales of his happier past (of which he is writing a book) Eventually, the Talbots become behind on their rent.
Other sources of information come from correspondence saved by other friends and business acquaintances. Bellini was the quintessential composer of the Italian bel canto era of the early 19th century, and his work has been summed up by the London critic Tim Ashley as: : ... also hugely influential, as much admired by other composers as he was by the public. Verdi raved about his "long, long, long melodies such as no one before had written." Wagner, who rarely liked anyone but himself, was spellbound by Bellini's almost uncanny ability to match music with text and psychology.
He was a pioneer in the practical assessment of subjective probabilities and utilities… (Schlaifer) influenced my intellectual development more than any other individual — more than Abraham Wald or von Neumann or Savage or Arrow.” In the preface to the second 1971 edition of Foundations of Statistics Savage wrote :This is a welcome opportunity to say that his [Schlaifer's] ideas were developed wholly independently of the present book, and indeed of other personalistic literature. They are in full harmony with the ideas of this book but are more down to earth and less spellbound by tradition.
Di Timur Matahari premiered at Epicentrum XXI in Kuningan, Jakarta on 11 June 2012; it received a wide release on 14 June 2012, during the school holidays. The film was meant for viewers of all ages, although Ale suggested parents may want to discuss issues in the film with their children. Maya Sofia and Rizky Sekar Afrisia, reviewing for the news website VIVA News, found the film to be reflective of how adults will forget or even abuse children during war; they wrote that the audience would be "spellbound" by the innocence of the children.
She was well educated by her parents and had received several years of education. Like many girls and young ladies at that time in Shanghai, Pan Miaoxin loved embroidery very much, so she was fascinated at the first sight of the beautiful papercut works made by Wang Zigan, which she had never seen before. Spellbound by Wang Zigan's techniques, she would visited the papercut shop everyday to watch him working and sometimes helped him when he was at the busy time. The two young people then gradually fell in love with each other.
While performing at his concert in Death Valley, a group of vampires attack Lestat. With Marius' help, they both fend off most of the vampires until Akasha bursts through the stage and takes Lestat with her. Akasha brings Lestat to her new home, where the two vampires mutually feed on one another, during which time Lestat becomes spellbound by Akasha and is forced to obey her, and Akasha proclaims Lestat her new king. After the concert, Jesse is taken to the home of her aunt, Maharet, who later reveals herself to be one of the Ancient Vampires.
This memoir deals with the years (1942–1945) that Traudl Junge spent with Adolf Hitler as his personal secretary. When he first hired her, by chance as it turns out, she was 21 years old and was sought out because a secretary needed to be replaced. During Traudl Junge's time with Hitler, she claims that she was blind to the genocidal activities that were conducted around her because she was so spellbound by Hitler's paternal charisma. She also describes in great detail some of the luxuries that she and other secretaries took advantage of while working for Hitler.
Tippi Hedren, seen here in a trailer for The Birds, was described as "absolutely thrilled" that Sienna Miller had been cast to play her. The Girl is based on Donald Spoto's 2009 book, Spellbound by Beauty: Alfred Hitchcock and His Leading Ladies, which examines the relationships between Alfred Hitchcock and the female stars of his films. Spoto wrote that Hitchcock attempted to turn Tippi Hedren (star of The Birds and Marnie) into his perfect woman, choosing the clothes and lipstick he thought she should wear. Hedren told Spoto that Hitchcock fantasised about running off with her.
By long training they know precisely the time when the curtain > rises, and the exact degree in which the audience is spellbound by what is > going on. At the sound of the bell [signaling the start of the show] they > sally out; scouring the pit for chance peanuts and orange-peel. When, by the > rhyming couplets, they are made aware that the curtain is about to fall, > they disappear—through the intensity of the performers. A profitable > engagement might be made, we think, with "the celebrated Dog Bill" [part of > William Cole's act in P. T. Barnum's American Museum].
According to Meher Baba, a mast is one who is entranced or spellbound by internal spiritual experiences and ecstasies, who cannot function outwardly in an ordinary way, and may appear mad to a casual outside observer. Such experiences, according to Meher Baba, stem from the station of a mast's consciousness (his or her state of consciousness) on inner planes of involution. In The Wayfarers: Meher Baba With the God- Intoxicated, British medical doctor William Donkin documents at length Meher Baba's contacts with masts throughout South Asia (primarily Iran, India, and Pakistan). The introduction, written by Meher Baba, explains their unique state and their outward characteristics.
In later productions, he was played by Paul Harrhy in London's West End (1992 premiere) and Jeffrey Kuhn on Broadway (2004 premiere). Appearing in several songs from the musical, the Zangara character has a major solo in the number "How I Saved Roosevelt". In HBO's 1998 biopic Winchell, moments after the assassination attempt, Walter Winchell leaps onto the running board of Miami's Police Chief's car, asking for an interview with Zangara, thereby getting at exclusive story for the New York Daily Mirror, though in real life this probably did not happen. The 2011 fantasy noir novel Spellbound by Larry Correia features Zangara's attempted assassination of Roosevelt.
Even before Suede's first album appeared in stores, Anderson's androgynous style and vague "confessions" about his sexuality stirred controversy in the British music press. His infamous comment that he was "a bisexual man who never had a homosexual experience" was indicative of how he both courted controversy and a sexually ambiguous, alienated audience. In 1993, Suede hit number one on the UK charts. Combining Morrissey's homoerotic posturing with David Bowie's glam theatrics, Anderson achieved rapid fame in the UK. America, however, was still spellbound by the grunge revolution and Anderson's grim yodellings clashed with the raw anger of Nirvana's Kurt Cobain and Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder.
"The Celts" was used as the main title theme for the television series. "Boadicea", which means "victorious", is a reference to the queen Boudica of the British-Celtic Iceni tribe in East Anglia who led a resistance against the occupying forces of the Roman Empire in 60 A.D., but was defeated and subsequently poisoned herself. As a song about her was already written, Richardson wished for a new track that depicted the idea of "being spellbound" by Boudica, which turned into "I Want Tomorrow". In the liner notes of the album's 1992 reissue, "I Want Tomorrow" is described, simply, as "thoughts of the present" and "March of the Celts" "echoes from the past".
John McMichael Centre (Belfast South Community Resources) McMichael's eldest son, Gary, followed in his father's footsteps of trying to build up the Ulster Democratic Party as a strong political wing for the UDA, but following the collapse of the party he dropped out of politics. His widow, Shirley McMichael (née McDowell) is a member of the Forum For Victims and Survivors, a group established to bring healing to those who were themselves victims or lost loved ones in The Troubles. A community engagement worker for the Northern Ireland Policing Board, she is an adherent of Contemporary Paganism and a member of the Police Pagan Association.Widow of UDA leader: I'm spellbound by pagan way of life, belfasttelegraph.co.
Scott wrote to the national headquarters to enlist their help in desegregating the Girl Scout Movement in Washington, D. C. At the end of 1956, Scott appeared in Atlanta, playing selections of music by Albéniz, Czerny, Debussy, Mompou, Prokofiev, and Ravel, as well as Bach's Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring, Chopin's Études, and Schumann's Davidsbündlertänze, leaving the audience "spellbound" by her "technical excellence". In 1957, she held a second performance at The Town Hall, containing much of the same repertoire as she had in Atlanta. The New York Times critic said of the Czerny Toccata Op. 92, "the brilliance of her playing and bravura spirit won shouts of approval" from the audience. She continued to play throughout the United States and Canada, into the early 1960s.

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