How To Use Vibrate In A Sentence

  • The floor began to vibrate from all of the feet stomping and dancing.
  • From the cooler water morwong, to a splendid angelfish and the brightly speckled hawkfish, this oceanic haven in the middle of a vast sea vibrates to the rhythm of the Pacific's currents.
  • Sure, it's a monument, but it's one that vibrates with a zest for life that nothing as ancient can match.
  • Then Danlo touched the tabletop and it vibrated up into a pearl-grey. THE BROKEN GOD
  • A crystal connected to an alternating voltage source will vibrate, generating an alternating voltage.
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  • The existing reducer design causes the reducer to vibrate and to make a noise usually, when considering of only static characteristic but neglecting of dynamic performance.
  • For a few minutes my whole being vibrates with a song so powerfully joyful I forget the years and stand as easy as a young man does at the start of the journey, careless of the distance to be covered or the load to be carried.
  • Produced with technocrat perfection, it presents the palate with a pleasing gooseberry and apple-like nose and a palate that vibrates with clean fruit flavours.
  • The finger of the violinist vibrates on the string by rocking rapidly back and forth and the vibrato is the result. Resonance in Singing and Speaking
  • The bus vibrated when the driver started the engine.
  • Buttons on the cane's handle vibrate gently to warn a user to dodge low ceilings and sidestep objects blocking their path.
  • He paged Yale again, this time to his cell number, then switched his phone over to vibrate mode. DO NO HARM
  • The sitar also has resonator strings that vibrate harmonically with the main strings and adds sustain to the main strings by the same principle, aka feedback.
  • Electrostatic combs, exciting the tines to vibrate laterally in antiphase in the plane of the wafer, and detecting the vibrating frequency in the meantime, are mounted on the two tines of fork.
  • The gentle hum of the shower slowly vibrated the particles from her body where they were absorbed by the thin mist forming near her feet.
  • Beirut is a city that vibrates with political culture and is defined by a history of social justice struggles.
  • For starters, we rejected anything that moved or vibrated randomly in all directions.
  • The audio reverberator system includes a piezoelectric transducer having an intrinsic capacitance coupled to an additional circuit element to form a low-pass type filter circuit for attenuating higher frequency inputs to the transducer to provide a desired flat frequency response for an audio vibrational output to vibrate a reverberation plate for production of a desired audio output.
  • We might say we perceive them as separate because they vibrate at different frequencies.
  • The entire house vibrates when a big truck goes by.
  • Heterogeneous elements, taken from all the religions of the Orient, were combined in the uranography of the ancients, and in the power ascribed to the phantoms that it evoked, vibrates in the indistinct echo of ancient devotions that are often completely unknown to us. [ The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • The area around that part of the Colony shook and vibrated.
  • The assumption commonly made is that vibrations in the water or air by direct contact cause the tympanic membrane to vibrate; this in turn causes a movement of the columella, which is transmitted to the perilymphatic fluid of the inner ear. Harvard Psychological Studies, Volume 1 Containing Sixteen Experimental Investigations from the Harvard Psychological Laboratory.
  • The vibration standard system puts into the use may enhance vibrates the sensor the examination, the test precision and the turbine wheel electric power facility reliability.
  • Because the string is magnetized, the magnetic field surrounding it will also vibrate with the string.
  • I looked at the receiver when I pulled it away from my ear, then slammed it down on the body causing it to vibrate with a low-pitched hum.
  • A grader had smoothed the worst of it but wind and traffic had corrugated the surface so that the whole car vibrated. SKORPION'S DEATH
  • Thinking of a satisfying bass guitar sound, a twang which makes the room vibrate but doesn't go through the ears at all.
  • The buildings in the centre of Sofia are of impressive proportions and it feels great to hear how they vibrate to the sound and how the music resonates against their windows.
  • The question issuing from Shitworth Whitworth MA, a sarcastic man who appeared to have been overwound, whose skin vibrated like a percussion instrument when he was upset, and who owned the biggest collection of detachable stiff white collars, always worn with blue and pink striped shirts, and always half a size too tight, any of us had ever seen. Kalooki Nights
  • Today I asked your child to depress the right pedal, to stop the action of the dampers so that the strings could vibrate freely.
  • When the diaphragm vibrates under the action of a sound wave, the current in the circuit varies due to the varying capacitance of the condenser.
  • The manakins vibrate their wings at more than 100 cycles per second, twice the speed of hummingbirds.
  • Since 1967, the official definition of a second is 9,192,631,770 cycles of the radiation that gets an atom of the element called cesium to vibrate between two energy states. Latest Articles
  • A penetrating ring vibrated the air, alerting the Rukklenn in the city below of the danger.
  • When spawning is actually taking place the male takes a position to hold the female against the bottom of the redd and both of the fish vibrate intensely while eggs and milt are simultaneously discharged.
  • The superstructure of the ferry ‘Norse Viking’ started to vibrate gently as below the engines and thrusters of the huge ship began to drive her into reverse and alongside the berth.
  • The problem was that our tea blender made the entire building vibrate.
  • They are sounded by striking the fork so that it vibrates; holding the stem against a wooden surface causes the surface to vibrate in sympathy as a soundboard, amplifying the sound.
  • Some people emit negative fumes, while others vibrate positive energy. Stay close to the positive ones; otherwise you will be smoked to death. RVM 
  • Yet right from the start, there are moments when his mask of deference slips a notch - when his grin stretches a little too wide, or his laughter vibrates for a moment longer than expected.
  • The arrow vibrated in the tree trunk, twanging, and in the sudden silence of the forest around them, Kieran could hear the sound of riders closing the distance.
  • A loud rip vibrated, slowly wheezing out and even grossed me out as I tried not to gag.
  • From early morning until late afternoon the lounge vibrated to the sound of lively jigs, reels, polkas and hornpipes played with tremendous enthusiasm by the participants.
  • Electrical wiring and telephone lines can transmit such signals by conduction; walls can vibrate subtly, as can pipes, beams, ducts, and the like.
  • Doug felt the solid rock floor beneath his feet vibrate as if a major moonquake had struck. Moonwar
  • When the eardrum vibrates, tiny bones within the middle ear transmit the sound signals to the inner ear.
  • The malleus is connected through a tiny joint to the incus, which is attached to the stapes, both of which vibrate in their turn as result of the vibrations of the bone preceding them. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
  • Patent-pending elastomer brush vibrates 7,000 times per stroke. Mihal Freinquel: A Mascara Review: What to Do When Your Favorite Mascara is Discontinued...
  • As air passes over our vocal cords, it makes them vibrate.
  • All nature sings, especially when its golden chords are struck and vibrated by the plenipotent finger of God. Autobiography, sermons, addresses, and essays of Bishop L. H. Holsey, D. D.,
  • The drum vibrates with the sound and rattles three small bones: the hammer, anvil and stirrup.
  • The bridge vibrated when a heavy truck passed.
  • Some people emit negative fumes, while others vibrate positive energy. Stay close to the positive ones; otherwise you will be smoked to death. RVM 
  • If you stare at the flying saucer long enough it begins to vibrate.
  • The grass made it difficult for the tires to get a purchase, and the anti-lock mechanism vibrated softly. Backlash « A Fly in Amber
  • Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string.
  • The first step is creating light that is polarized, or whose electric field vibrates in only one of two directions, horizontal or vertical.
  • Dozens of cultivation tools are at the organic producer's disposal, he added, from rotary hoes to new machines that simply vibrate soil to uproot newly sprouted weeds.
  • The music shook the very house; the bass rackett vibrated in the walls. In the Garden of Iden
  • What happens is, the ultrasound, which vibrates the air, vibrates what's called a piezoelectric transducer," she says. NPR Topics: News
  • The vocal cords vibrate when air is expired through the glottis, creating sound waves in the column of air within the pharynx, nose, and mouth.
  • Chee schlich details, held the mouth for it too - humans were so ridiculously frightful - and vibrated it awake. The Trouble Twisters
  • Heavy materials like brick and stone do not vibrate easily, and therefore soon reduce noise.
  • Her every movement vibrates with life, from the suggestive glance of her eyes to the turn of her head.
  • Notice how the the kazoo buzzes and vibrates to amplify (make louder) the sound of your voice.
  • Suddenly the quill on the thermograph began to vibrate. I, TOO, DREAM....
  • I noticed that as it held the plant in its forepaws, it rapidly moved its face and mouth, so that at times they appeared to vibrate.
  • The ringer is great - very loud and supplemented with a vibrate.
  • The ear canal is closed at its inner end by a thin diaphragm of stretched skin known as the eardrum or tympanic membrane, which vibrates as the air pressure changes.
  • Her body seemed to vibrate with it, and his main goal was to get her back to the hospital, where she could sit and decompress. BLINDSIGHTED
  • This is one reason why a piano tested in a music wareroom has always a more beautiful and richer sound than when in a drawing-room or hall, since each string is vibrated by the other instrument. Practical Mechanics for Boys
  • Through amplification and loudspeakers, the singer's voice vibrates the open piano strings.
  • There is haptic feedback; when virtual keys are pressed, the screen vibrates in response.
  • My muscles vibrate faster and faster until they hit a state of constant striation. 365 tomorrows » 2010 » February : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • By way, too, of further proof that my imagination had awakened, the significance of that knocking at the door set something vibrating within me that most surely had never vibrated before, so that I suddenly realized with what atmosphere of mystical suggestion is the mere act of knocking surrounded -- _knocking at a door_ -- both for him who knocks, wondering what shall be revealed on opening, and for him who stands within, waiting for the summons of the knocker. Masterpieces of Mystery In Four Volumes Mystic-Humorous Stories
  • He blew out a puff sound which vibrated his lips.
  • It is this centrifugal force, which varies with the square power of the exciter speed, that causes the machine to vibrate, move forward, and compact the soil.
  • A mechanical hum vibrates distantly, though I can only really hear it through my feet.
  • In stringed instruments, additional strings of wire that vibrate in sympathy with a unison note or one of its partials, bowed or plucked on the main strings, adding a shimmer to the sound.
  • Whilst he was writing the book in 1782 Beckford wrote in a letter, ‘I am at work on a story so horrid that I tremble whilst relating it, and have not a nerve in my frame but vibrates’.
  • Poor Puttel, after gazing wistfully out of the window at the gaunt city cats skulking about the yard, would retire to the rug, and curl herself up as if all hope of finding congenial society had failed; while little Nick would sing till he vibrated on his perch, without receiving any response except an inquisitive chirp from the pert sparrows, who seemed to twit him with his captivity. An Old-Fashioned Girl
  • To make a rectifier, the researchers considered an anharmonic chain sandwiched between two harmonic caps, one with stiff springs - which vibrate at higher frequencies - and the other with more pliable springs.
  • It vibrates the bed and extracts the build-up of mites - we also use an extraction filter that filters the air.
  • The sudden eruption of gunfire was so thunderous that the very air seemed to vibrate.
  • The whole house vibrates whenever a heavy lorry passes.
  • Movie sets are often a flurry of crashes and explosions, which can vibrate sensitive electronics, introducing visual noise known as microphonics into images. Analog Meets Its Match in Red Digital Cinema’s Ultrahigh-Res Camera « Isegoria
  • When a propeller produces thrust, aerodynamic and mechanical forces are present that cause the blade to vibrate.
  • The book vibrates with Ehrenreich's rage toward middle-class Americans.
  • He had these giant protuberant moles on his brow that vibrated when he yelled.
  • They used piezoelectric motors and nanocircuitry to make the blade they were installed in vibrate very rapidly, greatly increasing its cutting power.
  • The central component of the frequency standard or oscillator is a resonator that vibrates or oscillates with a well-defined frequency when excited.
  • The tiny dimensions of the device allowed it to vibrate quickly, achieving a millions-of-cycles-per-second frequency of 23.57 megahertz.
  • The moment the Dura's twin engines stuttered and vibrated into life in a cacophony of backfiring and oily blue smoke, Kara's resolve suddenly deserted her.
  • In the course of the watering cart produces vibration, and the circulation pipeline system installed in the cart is vibrated too.
  • The spined micrathena, common in the U.S., vibrates with such gusto that if you picked one up, you'd think it was a wind-up toy.
  • When a propeller produces thrust, aerodynamic and mechanical forces are present that cause the blade to vibrate.
  • Mr. Chairman and prize goose, -- The feelings which now agitate my sensorium on this Michaelmasian occasion stimulate the vibratetiuncles of the heartiean hypothesis, so as to paralyse the oracular and articulative apparatus of my loquacious confirmation, overwhelming my soul-fraught imagination, as the boiling streams of liquid lava, buried in one vast cinereous mausoleum -- the palace-crowded city of the engulphed Pompeii. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, October 2, 1841
  • Here, the air vibrates with the sound of booming waves and dancing, swooping birds calling to each other through the eddying gusts of Atlantic wind.
  • He has also vibrated bridges: steel bridges sound similar to bells; wooden ones are more like a big marimba or xylophone.
  • On completion of the section I had a look at the front suspension and found that a 24 mm bolt, which holds the wheel in the centre of the mudguard, had vibrated loose and fallen off.
  • Now growing in popularity is Aboriginal music featuring the didgeridoo, an elongated tube that vibrates when played.
  • When cooled to extremely low temperatures, electromagnets demonstrate an unusual behavior: For the first few nanoseconds after electricity is applied to them, they vibrate.
  • Electromagnetic waves of radio frequency can make molecules vibrate and heat up - like microwaves heat food.
  • A loud crackling sound vibrated through the hallway they were in and the bending of metal reached their ears.
  • The bus vibrated when the driver started the engine.
  • He paged Yale again, this time to his cell number, then switched his phone over to vibrate mode. DO NO HARM
  • It's important to tighten up the wheels properly, otherwise they vibrate loose and fall off.
  • The longer you stare, the more it shimmers and dizzies, pulses, throbs and vibrates. Times, Sunday Times
  • The whole house vibrates whenever a heavy lorry passes.
  • But this did nothing to stop Grant from fulfilling his end of the showdown; he socked Hearns with a straight right to the body and followed up with a left hook that must have made Hearns' cranium vibrate.
  • Lines pulse or vibrate, and ghostly dots flash at the intersections of lines.
  • They zapped the clusters with infrared light and microwaves to make the molecules vibrate and spin.
  • That implied subtext - that Frankenstein was a type of golem - made my pre-teen mind vibrate with a promise of special insight.
  • Along with this it vibrates quite violently in the old skyrocket until I get it out and press the yes.
  • Now if this tube swells so much that it entirely closes, as so often happens in cases of "cold in the head" as well as in constant irritation from adenoids, then may follow a vast train of difficulties -- earache, mastoiditis, etc. -- with the result that the tiny bones in the middle ear which vibrate so exquisitely may become ankylosed (stiffened) and deafness often follow. The Mother and Her Child
  • The existing reducer design causes the reducer to vibrate and to make a noise usually, when considering of only static characteristic but neglecting of dynamic performance.
  • Addressing vast audiences, the former slave ‘touches chords in the inner chambers thereof which vibrate music now sweet, now sad, now lightsome, now solemn, now startling, now grand, now majestic, now sublime’.
  • From early morning until late afternoon the lounge vibrated to the sound of lively jigs, reels, polkas and hornpipes played with tremendous enthusiasm by the participants.
  • The volume and bass of the music made my limbs ache as my blood vibrated with the sheer throbbing of the beat.
  • This is a new type of grinding machine consisting of cylindric grinding chamber suspended on springs and vibrated at high frequency with the help of an excentric mounted on an electric motor. 8. Preparation of glazes
  • They vibrate with emotions that do not simply serve the story, but rather power-charge it.
  • The tympanum of turtles is supported by a deep quadrate emargination, and the stapes of turtles is slender because it must vibrate quickly to transmit the sounds from the tympanum to the middle ear.
  • During the courtship, which can last up to several hours, the male vibrates and crosses in front of the female, while the female is preparing for spawning by digging the redd.
  • The cool metal vibrated under his hand, and, even as he waited, a deeper vibration went through the wall, boom, _boom_, low and rhythmic, like the beating of some great hidden heart, like the heart of the mountain itself, vast and stony and old. Asimov's Science Fiction
  • The atmosphere seemed to vibrate with tension.
  • And I can assure you that the Algonquin still vibrates with whatever turned on Mrs Parker and her vicious circle.
  • When the airplane was in a position to jettison the load, the pilot discovered the jettison switch guard had vibrated back to the closed position.
  • The geranium seemed to vibrate for an instant, swaying sideways as if caught by a breeze.
  • All of a sudden there was a clonk and the housing vibrated - that was the moment I realised I was deep.
  • The male orients toward the female, follows her, taps her abdomen with his foreleg, extends and vibrates his wing, licks her genitalia, and then mounts her and initiates copulation.
  • Traditional musical instruments include a bugle made from buffalo horn, a circular piece of iron with a string stretched across it that vibrates to produce sound, and a drum.
  • That causes the lattice to vibrate and can ultimately induce changes in the microstructure that in turn cause a circuit to fail - the chip equivalent of a light-bulb filament fusing.
  • Electrical wiring and telephone lines can transmit such signals by conduction; walls can vibrate subtly, as can pipes, beams, ducts, and the like.
  • The soft tissues in the upper airway vibrate when you breathe in and out.
  • Wesley appraised Ted's thick lips as they vibrated, like two fat, pink molluscs performing a shifty rhumba. BEHINDLINGS
  • The sound makes the eardrum vibrate, which in turn causes a series of three tiny bones (the hammer, the anvil, and the stirrup) in the middle ear to vibrate.
  • And it was diagrammed in most unsavory strokes the manner in which a mere bug, "vibrated up" to untenable proportion and lacking the volition of a higher creature, must be paired with a human to become an effective hybrid; further, it recorded of towns laid waste by the man-bug hybrids. Perquampi
  • About half a pint later the box vibrated violently, lights flashed and a voice ordered me back to the waitress, as a seat was waiting.
  • So if there are no eardrums around to be vibrated, there is no sound, merely waves in the air.
  • The rate at which an object vibrates is measured in Hertz or cycles per second.
  • The steady buzz of machinery vibrated in Slaeter's ears as he awoke.
  • The bridge vibrated when a heavy truck passed.
  • The jingling of bicycle bells vibrated in his ears.
  • Three small bones (the hammer, anvil, and stirrup bones) vibrate with the sound, passing the vibrations to the inner ear.
  • The tail is vibrated and shaken against rocks when the snake is irritated or alarmed and serves as a warning.
  • The whole station seemed to vibrate as the express train rushed through.
  • A shiver of magenta vibrates a yellow aureole of wall, dark teal scribbles a cloud of gray-blue floor.
  • But at the very last minute, just as the quizmaster was coming round, my phone vibrated.
  • The whole house vibrates whenever a heavy lorry passes.
  • Waves of ecstatic and delicate color vibrated around me and lulled me to a sense of peace beyond comprehension.
  • Books were written on the ethics of the game; experts came to the front; ping pong weeklies and monthlies were founded, to dumfound the masses, and the very air vibrated with the "ping" and the "pong. As A Chinaman Saw Us Passages from his Letters to a Friend at Home
  • These bones vibrate in succession and move the lower membrane of the organ of corti located in the cochlea of the inner ear.
  • The whole station seemed to vibrate as the express train rushed through.
  • A grader had smoothed the worst of it but wind and traffic had corrugated the surface so that the whole car vibrated. SKORPION'S DEATH
  • The beautifully spun yarns can still vibrate with strong primary reds, yellows and blues, into the more sophisticated variations of mauve, delicate pinks and maroons.
  • The crystal vibrates when a small electric current is applied to it.
  • It's important to tighten up the wheels properly, otherwise they vibrate loose and fall off.
  • The whole station seemed to vibrate as the express train rushed through.
  • Today I asked your child to depress the right pedal, to stop the action of the dampers so that the strings could vibrate freely.
  • Traditional musical instruments include a bugle made from buffalo horn, a circular piece of iron with a string stretched across it that vibrates to produce sound, and a drum.
  • The rattlesnake swiftly vibrated and shook its tail.
  • While drive rail mounts could potentially allow the drive to move or vibrate slightly after it is installed, the drive fits so tightly that it is not going to move.
  • The ultrasonic transducer vibrates longitudinally, its front cover plate links up with a half wavelength circular conical horn to increase the amplitude of the output end of the ultrasonic transducer.
  • This vibrates the branches, causing the fruit to fall onto the nets, and in the process murders your arms - I can vouch for this from personal experience.
  • The production of this vibration is by agreement on the part of all great colorists impossible through impasted color or that applied flatly to the surface, which they declare cannot be as powerful, as significant or as beautiful as that which vibrates, either by reason of the juxtaposition of color plainly seen, as with the impressionists, or of its broken tone, or by virtue of the influence of a transparent glaze of color which enables two colors to be seen at once. Pictorial Composition and the Critical Judgment of Pictures
  • Far from being evasive, I think that Coetzee is passionately confessing, and that his entire book vibrates with confession.
  • The ear canal is closed at its inner end by a thin diaphragm of stretched skin known as the eardrum or tympanic membrane, which vibrates as the air pressure changes.
  • A mathematical string can vibrate in many patterns, which represent a different type of particle, and among these are certain patterns that represent massless particles.
  • They began to sing in a strange unfamiliar tongue, swaying gently as they did, their voices rising in a high sweet chorus that vibrated through Kellen's body like the carillons of Armethalieh. Tran Siberian
  • Lia wished the thing he had given her would just vibrate; a feeling of unease rested in the pit of her stomach.
  • As we headed to the vector, our aircraft, without warning, began to vibrate violently.
  • Now they were required to explode, dance, vibrate, arch, become continents crawling with armies of desire.
  • When you speak, air rushes from your lungs and makes your vocal cords vibrate, producing the sound of your voice.
  • The strings of a piano vibrate when the keys are struck.
  • The inner ear has small hairs rooted in fluid and when tympanic responses from sound goes through three small bones the hairs vibrate, or oscillate in sympathy.
  • Her body seemed to vibrate with it, and his main goal was to get her back to the hospital, where she could sit and decompress. BLINDSIGHTED
  • Photocells capable of seeing things in a physical sense, advanced photography which can record what is seen or even what is not, thermionic tubes capable of controlling potent forces under the guidance of less power than a mosquito uses to vibrate his wings, cathode ray tubes rendering visible an occurrence so brief that by comparison a microsecond is a long time, relay combinations which will carry out involved sequences of movements more reliably than any human operator and thousands of times as fast — there are plenty of mechanical aids with which to effect a transformation in scientific records. As We May Think
  • Newton concluded that these forms of light vibrate at different frequencies.
  • Once the blade struck something, it would vibrate at an ultrasonic frequency, making the gash even bigger.
  • The steering wheel began to vibrate in my hands, and my thoughts outraced the speedometer. The Dark Side of Innocence
  • The book briefly vibrates at eighteen hertz, which is the resonant frequency of the human eyeball. Farm Fetish
  • Thus a plurality of coupled vibratory systems are provided, tuned to one another, which vibrate with one another at the same frequency.
  • The atmosphere seemed to vibrate with tension.
  • The back of the hall begins to vibrate: four tam-tams (two below, two in the balcony) balloon the space into white noise.
  • But he still did nowt until a Crown Derby plate, which had been a wedding present to their late Mum and Dad, vibrated off its hook in the front room and smashed into a thousand pieces.
  • The researcher believes giraffes may use Helmholtz resonance, causing the air in their long windpipes to vibrate at a low pitch.
  • When a propeller produces thrust, aerodynamic and mechanical forces are present that cause the blade to vibrate.
  • The mirror on the wall vibrated with every beat of the footsteps, and sluggishly, Lena registered her own shaking image.
  • The voice came from all around as non-directional speakers vibrated the air of the room itself.
  • A high degree of polish is achieved when the shaping plywood forms are faced with smooth plastic and the concrete is vibrated as it is being poured in place.
  • A single front roller, powered by a second motor, vibrates the concrete.
  • Helicopters have many more moving parts, and they vibrate more than fixed-wing aircraft, so parts wear out faster.
  • The periods differ, so the buildings vibrate with different frequencies and slap against each other.
  • To vibrate three times as fast, or once in every third part of a second, the cord had to be only one-ninth of 39.1 inches in length.
  • The image vibrates with the raw, visceral excitement of that night.
  • The bridge vibrated when a heavy truck passed.
  • He paged Yale again, this time to his cell number, then switched his phone over to vibrate mode. DO NO HARM
  • Move around while listening and the hum changes to a low, soothing throb or at particularly resonant points in the room, vibrates your skull rather unpleasantly.
  • When the prongs of a tuning fork vibrate back and forth in a regular manner, a periodic sound is produced.

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