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~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Monthly Archives: August 2012

Agatha and Barry: Birth Announcements from Regional and Country Areas (July)

31 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Jack Ronald and Charlie Robert (Madeline)

Sonny John and Hayley Kay (Harry)

Willow Morgan and Grace Mary (Connor)

 

Girls

Agatha Amy

Althea Helenne

Bella Ruby Hope (Cooper)

Charlotte Barbara Ann (Matilda)

Chloe Patricia Eliza (Brad)

Delilah Ruby (Sienna, Indiana)

Edith Victoria

Elke Star (Layla)

Emily Kate Jo-Ann

Esmerelda Elizabeth Tracey

Grace Isabel May (Jack, Toby)

Lata Louise

Lilah Erna Maree (Sebastian)

Marcelli Nancy

Maria Charlotte (Jacinta)

Mila Corazon

Montana Amarli Grace (Lachie)

Precious Kenna (Trixie)

Ruby Paige Ellen (Cayden)

Sage Allison Elizabeth

Sophie Viva (Chloe)

Xanthe Eve

Yudikah Isobel (Aengus)

Zebina Lee

Zoe Grace Marie (Ava)

 

Boys

Aaron Andrew Grimaldi

Arthur Gerard Wayne

Barry Charles (Matilda, Bill)

Blake Max Cecil (Riley)

Chase Charlie Kelson

Darcy Shane Lindsay (Lachlan, Emma)

Edward Neville (Jane, Maggie, Alice, Grace)

Fraser Hindrick (Jayla)

Harper McDermott (Archer)

Hunter Matthew Scott

Inari

Jensen Stephen

Jordy Nate

Julian Zhen Peng

Keanu Austin

Monti Damian (Klancy, Evie)

Nate William Samuel (Beth, Taj)

Odin Marc

Oscar Melvin (Asha)

Quinn Nicholas King (Taine, River, Poppi)

Seth John Patrick (Olivia, Aaliah)

Stuart John George (Adelle)

Sullivan Patrick (Dempsey, Ronin)

Zac Allan John (Elizabeth)

Zanden Luca (Decklan, Coden, Tayton)

(Picture is of Bendigo in Victoria during winter; photo from Bendigo Tourism)

Celebrity Baby News: AFL Babies from the Sydney Swans

30 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

325499-sarahChannel 7 weather presenter Sarah Cumming, and her fiancé, assistant coach Stuart Dew, welcomed their first child on August 27, and have named their daughter Frankie Rose.

Sarah has worked at Channel 7 for several years, and has been their weather presenter since 2010. She will be on maternity leave until March next year.

Stuart is a former AFL footballer who played for both Port Adelaide and Hawthorn. He retired in 2009 and is currently assistant coach for the Sydney Swans.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Ryan O’Keefe, and his wife Tara, welcomed their second child in May, and have named their daughter Savannah. Savannah O’Keefe joins big brother Levi, nearly three.

Ryan has played for the Sydney Swans his entire career, since 2000. He has also been selected to play for Victoria, and Australia. He won the Jim Stynes Medal in 2006 and the Bob Skilton Medal in 2009.

Tara (nee Duggan) and Ryan were married in 2008.

(Photo shows Sarah Cumming and Stuart Dew)

News Limited Name Study

30 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Historical Records, Names in the News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

classic names, hyphenated names, name studies, popular names, popularity, punctuation in names, unique names, unisex names, variant spellings

John and Margaret – #1 in Australia Since Forever

News Ltd analysed all the name data in Australia since 1790, and have found that the most popular names in our history are John for boys, and Margaret for girls. Nearly 262 000 boy babies have been named John in the past 220 years, and 96 458 baby girls have received the name Margaret.

Also-Rans

While John is oodles ahead of the #2 boy’s name, David, Margaret wasn’t far ahead of Sarah, Elizabeth and Mary.

Most Consistent Performers

William and Mary have appeared in the Top Ten for each year more often than any other names.

Top Ten Then, and Now

Only two names in history have managed to make the overall Top Ten and the Top Ten of 2011 – William and James. That shows how tough it is to choose a name which is truly “timeless”. And for a girl, apparently impossible.

Numbers of Names

112 689 different names have been used between 1790 and 2011 – 76 459 female, and 46 230 male. Much more variety in girl’s names, it seems (although I wonder how many of those are just variant spellings?)

Unique Names

51 293 females and 31 042 males have received unique names in our history (again, is this including variant spellings?)

The Gamut of Unique Names

Girls – Aab to Zyrkia-Lee

Boys – A to Zzak (aha, I knew it was just variant spellings!)

Differences Between States

South Australia: The most relaxed about gender, with a number of boys called Sharon, and girls named George, David, John, Stephen and Trevor. (Or else they just have more clerical errors than any other state).

Victoria: The most likely to abandon old-time names, with Basil, Cecil, Agnes and Eunice completely out of use since the late 1920s to early 1930s. (This seems rather selective).

Queensland: The most likely state to have hyphenated names and/or apostrophes in their names. Examples included Lospipeli-Fakamanatu-He-Lotu-Ka, Onyx-Z’Xyon, Zche-Ztev’n and Bendeicta-Malia-Eva-I-Loto-Mua.

Tasmania: The most fond of variant spellings for names (I can attest that this one is quite accurate).

Please note that Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory declined to share their name data, which must make the study incomplete.

Worst Names Ever, According to “Experts”

These names were voted the worst of all time, by a panel of un-named experts. (Probably just the journalists and a couple of their friends). See if you agree!

BOYS

  1. B/O
  2. Trey’Von
  3. Adaquix-Jeramiah
  4. Zzak (I think they just lazily went for the last name on the list)
  5. Aeneas (philistines)
  6. Baileyjayden
  7. Trinkyn
  8. A, B, C, D etc (I think they lazily just went for the first name on the list)
  9. Niño (I think they’re daft to say this is a bad name)
  10. Ace (ridiculous that this makes the Top Ten of worst names!)

GIRLS

  1. Bacardee (plain snobbish to make this the #1 worst name in history)
  2. Kataraina-Heneti-Teowaena-Hune-Maera (cultural diversity – boo! hiss!)
  3. Chawnlahnee
  4. Janis-“Milly”
  5. Achant’E
  6. Tinkerbell (bit predictable to go after this one)
  7. Lotus-Moon (ditto)
  8. Dare (I fail to see the horror)
  9. Abbegaile (no WAY is this the worst variant spelling in history! I even know how it’s said!)
  10. Bardót-Dior

Famous Names: Ned Kelly

29 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

African names, African-American names, American names, Anglo-Saxon names, Australian idioms, banned names, birth announcements, British Baby Names, Cornish names, English name trends, english names, famous namesakes, folk etymology, Google, Irish names, locational names, middle names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, nicknames, popular culture, Scottish slang, surname names, unisex names, US name popularity

On August 2 this year, it was reported that the descendants of notorious bushranger Edward “Ned” Kelly were about to receive his remains, 132 years after he was hanged for murder. At that time, the bodies of executed prisoners were buried in unmarked graves in Melbourne Gaol, and Kelly was one of them. In 1929, he and several others were re-buried in Pentridge Prison during renovations to Melbourne Gaol, and last year scientists were able to identify Ned Kelly’s skeleton from a group of twenty-four at Pentridge, by comparing his DNA to that of living members of the Kelly family. The Kellys can now give Ned a private burial.

Ned Kelly was the son of an Irish convict, and gained notoriety as a horse thief and cattle rustler before being convicted of bank robbing and murder. He was hanged on November 11 1880. He looms large in the Australian imagination, and is widely seen as a folk hero, and a symbol of Irish-Australian resistance against the ruling classes and police corruption. There is in the Ned Kelly legend a particular type of Australian masculinity which is admired: physically powerful, ballsy, defiant, daring, anti-authority, and an under-dog. The phrase, As game as Ned Kelly, is the ultimate praise for bravery, and his legend has spawned countless folk stories and ballads – not to mention a few films.

The name Ned is a pet form of names starting with Ed-, such as Edward and Edmund. It has been used as a nickname since at least the 14th century, and as an independent name since the 17th century. One theory is that it began life as a contraction of the affectionate “mine Ed“, which became understood as “my Ned”. Although this can’t be verified (and Elea at British Baby Names remains slightly sceptical), the story does add a layer of sweetness to the name.

It is among the first names that crossed the pond, because a baby named Ned was born in the English colony of Virginia, so it became a British and American name almost simultaneously. It has often appeared in American popular culture, such as Ned Flanders on The Simpsons and Ned Dorsey from 1990s sit-com Ned and Stacey. All-American girl detective Nancy Drew even had a boyfriend named Ned Nickerson. (Ned and Nancy! Adorable!). Ned was on the US Top 1000 until the mid-1970s.

Like Kevin in England and Bevan in Australia, it’s a name with a bad rep elsewhere, because in Scotland ned is slang for a hooligan or petty criminal. Given our own history with the name, this seems unlikely to put Australian parents off. Here solid unpretentious Ned will always be associated with folk hero Ned Kelly, but as it’s currently fashionable as an upper-class name in England, this makes it seem quite chic as well.

Kelly is an Anglicisation of the Irish surname Ó Ceallaigh, meaning “son of Ceallach”. Ceallach is often interpreted as meaning “bright headed”, but it may mean “church-going”, as the Irish word for church is ceall. It can also be seen as an Anglicisation of Ó Cadhla, meaning “son of Cadhla”, with the male name Cadhla meaning “attractive, graceful”.

Outside Ireland, the surname Kelly can be from place names in Scotland (in this case, probably from the Anglo-Saxon meaning “calf hill”) and in Devon, the latter derived from the Cornish word for “grove”. However, it is much more common as an Irish surname.

Kelly has been used as a first name since at least the late 17th century, and is another name which seems to have been used in Britain and America almost at the same time. It appears to have quickly become far more common in America as an Irish heritage name.

Although the name was first given to boys, in a relatively brief space of time the name seems to have been accepted as unisex, with roughly even numbers of males and females named Kelly in colonial America. Quite a few of the early American Kellys arrived directly from Ireland itself, and these were just as likely to be female, if not more so.

I don’t know why, but the name seems to have been commonly given to the sons and daughters of Christianised black African indentured servants in early colonial America. I would be fascinated to know the reason for this, and wonder if there is an African name Keli that seemed familiar to both cultures. Or perhaps working alongside Irish indentured servants gave them a fondness for the name.

Kelly first shows up on the US Top 1000 in 1880 as a male name, and first appears there for females in 1944. It grew in popularity for both sexes, but really took off as a girl’s name in the 1950s with the fame of glamorous Hollywood actress Grace Kelly (of Irish background). After she became Princess Grace of Monaco, the name simply bounded up the popularity charts.

Kelly peaked for both boys and girls in the late 1960s, but then lost ground as a boy’s name, while maintaining a female presence; it even managed to peak again for girls in the 1970s. Kelly hasn’t ranked as a boy’s name in the US for ten years, while it is now #335 for girls, and falling.

In Australia, the history of the name is much shorter, and it only ever charted for girls. It first appears in the charts in the 1950s at #560 (about one Kelly per year). By the following decade, it was already in the Top 100, and peaked in the 1970s at #13. It left the Top 100 in the early 2000s, and last year just ten baby girls named Kelly were born in New South Wales, giving it a ranking of #641.

Amongst the most common Google searches used to reach my blog are those enquiring about using Kelly as a boy’s name, and many of these are from Australia. With Kelly becoming rare as a name for girls, and the fame of American world surfing champion Kelly Slater (of Irish background) lifting its profile internationally as a male name, this seems the perfect time for Kelly to step up and gain more use for boys in Australia.

I hope that these assiduous Googlers are giving serious thought to choosing Kelly as their son’s name. I scan the birth notices for Kelly, and this year I have only seen it used as a middle name for boys. However, Kelly Slater himself uses his middle name (his first name is Robert), so these babies do have the choice to go by the name Kelly when they get older.

NOTE: Although you are free to call your child Ned, or Kelly, it is, bizarrely, forbidden in New South Wales to name a baby Ned Kelly. This makes Ned Kelly one of Australia’s rare illegal names.

(The picture is from Sidney Nolan’s series of paintings of Ned Kelly in his armour 1946-47. These images are some of the most iconic and recognisable of Australian artworks. Taken from ABC News).

Celebrity Baby News: Babies of Sports Stars

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Rugby union player Mark Gerrard, and his wife Larisa, welcomed a son named Makson on August 20. Due to a blood type conflict during the pregnancy, Makson is still being cared for at the Royal North Shore Hospital. Makson Gerrard joins older siblings Markus, aged 8, Milana, aged 6, and Mateja, aged 2.

Mark plays for the Melbourne Rebels, and he is the brother of netballer Mo’onia Gerrard, and the cousin of former rugby player Wycliff Palu.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Cricketer Ed Cowan, and his wife, Virginia Lette, welcomed a daughter named Romy on August 19. Romy Cowan was born in England, as Ed and Virginia are renting a house in the Cotswolds.

Edward or “Ed” plays county cricket for Gloucestershire in England, as well state cricket for the Tasmanian Tigers, and for the Sydney Sixers in the Twenty20 League. Virginia or “V” is a radio and television presenter.

(Photo shows Mark and Larisa Gerrard with baby Makson)

Waltzing With … Darwin

26 Sunday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Waltzing with ...

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Anglo-Saxon names, english names, famous namesakes, locational names, name history, name meaning, surname names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

This blog post was first published on August 26 2012, and revised and re-posted on May 18 2016.

Famous City, Famous Namesake
Today is the last day of the Darwin Festival, a Top End cultural extravaganza of art, music, dance, comedy, film, theatre, cabaret, and festivities. The city of Darwin is known for its laid-back lifestyle and unique multicultural mix, with people of over fifty nationalities living side-by-side and intermingling.

If you attended the festival, you could have learnt how to make Chinese dumplings, watched an Aboriginal drag queen, got a make-over at an African beauty salon staffed by children, picnicked with teddy-bears, been seduced at a Bollywood burlesque show, swum at a pool party, gone to a Rio-style cabaret, and attended a rock concert in someone’s back yard.

Darwin is the capital of the Northern Territory, the smallest Australian capital, and the most northerly of our capital cities. It looks towards Asia, across the Timor Sea, and is geographically closer to the capital cities of five other countries than it is to the capital of its own.

It has the highest Indigenous population of any capital city, with perhaps 10% of the city’s residents being Aboriginal, and has a significant Asian population from China, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines. Darwin swelters in tropical heat year-round, and is one of the most lightning-prone areas of the world. Having been bombed by the Japanese in World War II, and flattened by Cyclone Tracey in 1974, it’s been rebuilt twice and looks very modern.

The first British person to see Darwin harbour was Lieutenant John Stokes in 1839, who was on HMS Beagle. The ship’s captain, John Wickham, named the port after naturalist Charles Darwin, who had sailed with them on the Beagle‘s previous voyage. Charles Darwin had spent almost five years sailing the world on the Beagle, and it was his adventure of a lifetime.

He accumulated enough specimens to make his reputation and keep him occupied for years, not to mention surviving an earthquake and discovering a new species of dolphin. In Australia, he found the platypus and kangaroo-rat so odd that it seemed to him two distinct Creators must have been at work making life on earth – a radical thought for someone who had just finished studying to become a clergyman (not surprisingly, he went with a scientific career instead).

Darwin returned to England a celebrity, but what he didn’t do on his trip was discover evolution, for that idea was decades old, and familiar to Darwin’s own grandfather, Erasmus. What he did (when he got home) was come up with natural selection as a means to help explain the mechanism behind evolutionary theory.

His masterwork On the Origin of Species proved a bestseller, but Darwin avoided using the word evolution in case it proved too controversial, and only vaguely alluded to humans being part of the evolutionary framework. However, it resonated with both the scientific community and popular imagination, inspired the ideas of others, and made evolutionary theory an established part of the modern world-view.

Name Information
The English surname Darwin has two separate meanings. Originally it was from the Anglo-Saxon personal name Deorwine, meaning “dear friend”. Later it was taken from the town of Darwen, which stands on the river of that name in Lancashire. The river’s original name seems to have been Darwent, from the British meaning “valley thickly grown with oaks”. The surname Darwin is most often found in the north of England, suggesting the origin from the town is more common.

Darwin has been used as a personal name since at least the 18th century, and in England was first associated with Lincolnshire. Charles Darwin was descended from the Darwins of Lincolnshire, and he inherited the family estate there, which came down to him through his grandfather.

Even in the 19th century, a link with Lincolnshire continued, but the name became more common in the Midlands, a focal point for the Darwin family as it married into the Wedgwood family, famous for its pottery. So many Darwins went on to do interesting and worthy things that it isn’t possible to say everyone called Darwin had their name inspired by Charles Darwin – it might well have been another admired family member.

The name Darwin has always been more common in the United States, where it was first associated with the New England area. Although some of the towns and natural features in America called Darwin are named in honour of Charles Darwin, unlike in other countries, several are named are local people whose first name was Darwin.

The name Darwin has been on and off the US Top 1000 since the 19th century, with a long continuous stretch from the early 20th century until the mid 1990s. It peaked in 1938 at #279. It has been on the Top 1000 again since 2001; it is currently #876 and generally fairly stable. In the UK, the name Darwin has been generally rising, and 27 baby boys were given the name Darwin in 2014.

In Australia, Darwin is extremely rare as a first name, and only slightly more common as a middle name. Although it can be found a handful of times in records, most Australians probably think of it as a “modern” name. While Adelaide and Sydney are accepted as baby names here, I suspect for many people Darwin seems more of a “place” name than a “person” name. However, Darwin is genuinely Australian, and honours a wonderful namesake – a great thinker and humanitarian scientist who changed our world forever.

POLL RESULT
Darwin received a decent approval rating of 68%. 26% of people thought the name was okay, and 14% hated it.

(Picture of a storm over Darwin from the NT News; the photo was snapped from Darwin’s Evolution Building)

Celebrity Baby News: Ed Husic and Bridget Tilley

25 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Ed Husic and Bridget Tilley

Tags

Arabic names, celebrity baby names

Labor MP Ed Husic, and his wife Bridget Tilley, welcomed their first child on August 8 and have named their son Sam Haris. Sam Husic was born at 8.35 am, weighing 3.6 kg (just over 7 lb), and 49.2 cm long.

Edham “Ed” Husic has represented the seat of Chifley in western Sydney for the Australian Labor Party since 2010. He has a background working for the Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union. He comes from a Bosniac family, and describes himself as a non-practising Muslim.

Bridget Tilley works at Bridge Media, and has a background in sports media production. Both Ed and Bridget were excited that their son arrived on the same day that Sally Pearson and Anna Meares won gold medals at the London Olympics.

Sam’s middle name Haris is an Arabic name meaning “vigilant guardian”. It is common amongst Muslims.

Celebrity Baby News: Babies for Speedy Champions of the Track

25 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Babies for Speedy Champions of the Track

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Jockey Luke Nolen, and his wife Alicia, welcomed a daughter named Kailey on January 16. Kailey Nolen joins big brother Dane, aged 3. Luke recently won the Scobie Breasley Medal, which recognises excellence in horse racing on Melbourne racetracks, and dedicated his award to his daughter. Luke also won the medal last year, making him one of only four jockeys who have won more than once. Luke is most famous for riding Black Caviar to victory in the Diamond Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot. Black Caviar herself took out the Victorian Racehorse of the Year Award.

V8 Supercar driver Lee Holdsworth, and his wife Alana, welcomed a daughter named Ava Lily on August 10. Last year Lee won the International V8 Supercars Championship.

Inka Rose and Eli Seebo: Birth Announcements from Adelaide (July)

24 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Leila Dianne and Annabel Ilka

 

Girls

Arielle Olivia

Ashley Addison Victoria

Bianca Citlali

Carys Jane (Alexandra)

Evie Ophelia Ann (Flynn)

Faith Louise

Giuliana Emma

Hazel Alice (Ivy)

Inka Rose

Jaylah Pearl (Sarah, Lisa, Leah)

Jorja Lynette

McKenna Jade (Lachie)

Nina Majella (Torbison)

Ruby Kaja (Jonah, Milly) – Kaja pronounced KY-uh

Saya Josephine Sutherland (Mizuki)

Scarlett Winter

Tara Ann Rose (Ryan, Trent, Rhys, Toby)

Teija Willow (Tegan, Trent)

Tori Amelia (Ayden)

Willow Elizabeth May

 

Boys

Ashton Connor Reace

Caelan Michael Levi (Schyler)

Carter Matthew Edward

Chase Torean

Cooper Robert Peter

Eli Seebo (Ella)

Elliot Stratford (Lara)

Fletcher Casey

Hamish William Noel

Jake Arthur John (Sean)

Maison Will (Mani)

Miller Dre (Zander)

Nicholas Roc-Antoni (Isaac)

Oliver Huxley (Ailsa, Erin)

Orlando Tylon

Parker Edward James

Tasman Ross

Tayden Flynn (Karsha, Naish)

Tyler Nile (Deacon)

Xavier Manny

(Picture is of the Adelaide Hills, whose Wine Region held the Winter Reds Festival at the end of July; photo from The Adelaide Review)

A Girl’s Name from an Aboriginal Language Meaning “Star”

23 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Naming Assistance

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

astronomical names, Australian Aboriginal names, dictionaries, famous namesakes, Google, Italian vocabulary words, name history, name meaning, nicknames, slang terms, Swedish slang terms

Anika has written in to the blog about a name she is considering but is unsure about. Her husband’s family is Indigenous Australian, one side being from the Wakka Wakka people of south-east Queensland. They have been told of a name Mirri Yannan meaning “falling star”, but it is from a language of northern New South Wales.

Anika adores the name Mirri, and its meaning of “star”, and would love to use it. However, when she did a search for the name, the meaning of “dog” was returned by Google. She doesn’t like the idea of her daughter thinking her name means dog, and now she’s not sure about it.

This is an issue I raised in my article about Australian Aboriginal names – there are lots of Aboriginal languages, and a word may mean something pleasant in one language, and less appealing in another. For example, Merinda can be taken from a Sydney-area language meaning “beautiful”, but in South Australia it means “leech”. This isn’t unique to Australian languages. Pippa is becoming a popular name in the English-speaking world as a short form of Phillipa, but in Swedish it is vulgar slang for “to have sexual intercourse”, while in Italian it means “masturbate, hand job”.

I read through some dictionaries and language guides in regard to the word mirri. It does mean “dog” in the Ngiyampaa and Wiradjuri languages of New South Wales. Mirri also means “face” in the Paakantyi language from New South Wales, and “sun” in the Gooniyandi language of northern Western Australia. So it has several meanings in different Australian languages.

I tracked it down in a dictionary from the Kamilaroi or Gamilaraay people from northern New South Wales. Their word for star is mirii, and mirii yanan means “shooting star” (meteor).

So I think you have a couple of options open to you. You could use Mirri or Mirii, which is said exactly the same way (I rang the very helpful Visitors Centre and asked).

If you are truly bothered by mirri meaning “dog” in another language, then mirii sounds like the solution to your dilemma, as well as being the word you were originally looking for.

I think Mirii makes an extremely pretty name for a girl, and I love its meaning of “star”. I hope you use the name, in whichever form you like best and feel most attracted to.

(Some information in the article from Macquarie Aboriginal Words, published 2006)

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