陕西西安市西北工业大学附属中学2026届第十三次适应性训高三英语试题(PDF版,含答案,无听力原文,无音频)

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陕西西安市西北工业大学附属中学2026届第十三次适应性训高三英语试题(PDF版,含答案,无听力原文,无音频)

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参考答案
听力部分:1-5 BCABA 6-10 BABAC 11-15 ABABC 16-20 BCACB
阅读:21-23 BAC 24-27 CADD 28-31 CBBC 32-35 BCAC 36-40 EGBFC
完型填空:41-45 BBABC 46-50 BAADC 51-55 BBAAB
语法填空:
56. significantly 57. occurring 58. separation 59. Despite 60. how
61. preserved 62. precision 63. varied 64. As 65. a
写作:
第一节:(One Possible Version)
Notice
Dear fellow students,
To promote a greener campus and cultivate our sense of responsibility, the School Greening Committee is
launching a “Campus Plant Adoption” activity.
Each student may adopt one campus plant, attending to its daily care — watering, tidying fallen leaves, and
noting seasonal changes. The adoption period lasts one semester, and participants are expected to submit a simple
growth record by the end of the term.
If you are interested, please sign up via the link on the school website by May 20th. Let’s grow together with
our plants! We are looking forward to your participation!
School Greening Committee
第二 节(One Possible Version)
Upon entering the supply room, Mark’s heart sank. The shelf where the blue paint should have been was
completely bare. Panic clawed at his chest. Just as despair threatened to overwhelm him, a memory of Mr.
Thompson’s lesson about color blending flickered to life — blue could be mixed from green and purple! With
trembling but focused hands, he measured and blended the two vibrant pigments, adjusting proportions until the
exact ocean blue hue he’d envisioned bloomed before him. Alex clapped excitedly, “You did it!” Fueled by
newfound hope, Mark sprinted back to his canvas, brushes dancing with renewed determination.
Two days later, Mark stood nervously besides his reborn painting at the exhibition. The once-stained canvas
now came alive with deep, shifting blues, where rolling waves crashed against rocky cliffs — those accidental
splatters had been cleverly transformed into glistening sea bubbles and weathered rock faces. His palms grew
clammy as he stared at the work, every detail reminding him of the panic he’d felt days before. Just as uncertainty
crept in, Mr. Thompson approached, his eyes twinkling with admiration. “You didn’t just fix mistakes, Mark. You
wove it into the soul of the piece.” Alex elbowed him lightly, whispering, “Told you it would work.” Mark’s smile
widened, understanding that unexpected flaws could bloom into the most beautiful surprises.2026届第十三次适应性训练
高三英语
第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30分)
注意:做题时,请先将答案标在试卷上。听力部分结束前,你将有两分钟的时间将试卷上的
答案转涂到答题卡上。
第一节(共 5小题;每小题 1.5分,满分 7.5分)
听下面 5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。
听完每段对话后,你都有 10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话读两遍。
1. When will Charlie have the interview
A. Tomorrow. B. In a week. C. In two weeks.
2. What has the man decided about the skiing holiday
A. To invite his grandparents along.
B. To change it to another time.
C. To go without the children.
3. What’s the man’s concern about Zootopia 2
A. It’s not creative enough.
B. Judy and Nick aren’t funny.
C. New characters aren’t vivid.
4. How does the man describe Eric
A. Humorous. B. Observant. C. Curious.
5. How much should the man pay
A. $ 4. B. $ 5. C. $ 9.
第二节(共 15小题;每小题 1.5分,满分 22.5分)
听下面 5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的 A、B、C三个选项中
选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,
每小题 5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出 5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第 6段材料,回答第 6、7题。
6. How many days does the man work in a week
A. 5 days. B. 6 days. C. 7 days.
7. Who is the girl
A. A passenger. B. The man’s colleague. C. The man’s daughter.
听第 7段材料,回答第 8、9题。
8. What did Sandra do last night
A. She repaired her phone.
B. She called up Michael.
C. She learnt to paint.
9. What did Sandra and Peter agree to do on Sunday
A. Play tennis. B. Visit London. C. Go to the dentist.
听第 8段材料,回答第 10至 12题。
10. What color does the woman like best
A. Black. B. White. C. Red.
11. What will the speakers do this evening
A. Attend a party. B. Go shopping. C. Do some cleaning.
12. What’s the relationship between the speakers
A. Colleagues. B. Husband and wife. C. Salesman and customer.
听第 9段材料,回答第 13至 16题。
13. What does the woman suggest doing first
A. Seeing a film. B. Visiting James. C. Going climbing.
14. What will the man finish before calling James
A. A journal. B. A report. C. An essay.
15. How will the speakers go to the new park
A. By taxi. B. By bike. C. By bus.
16. Where will the speakers meet on Saturday morning
A. In a supermarket. B. Near their school. C. At the West Mountain.
听第 10段材料,回答第 17至 20题。
17. When does the class finish
A. At 5:00 p.m. B. At 5:30 p.m. C. At 6:00 p.m.
18. How often do the students take Lindsay Black’s class in a week
A. Twice. B. Three times. C. Four times.
19. What does the speaker ask the students to do
A. Photocopy her lessons.
B. Visit the school website.
C. Buy the student’s book.
20. What do we know about the speaker
A. She’s ambitious. B. She’s strict. C. She’s humorous.
第二部分 阅读理解(共两节,满分 50分)
第一节(共 15题;每小题 2.5分,满分 37.5分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。
A
Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) technology is a groundbreaking solution that enables electric vehicles (EVs) to interact
bidirectionally with the power grid — storing excess energy when demand is low and feeding it back to the grid
during peak hours. PowerSync’s V2G service makes this innovative technology accessible to everyday EV owners,
offering both environmental benefits and financial rewards.
Hardware Requirement
Users can choose a compatible (兼容的) V2G charger provided by PowerSync for 399, or use their own
existing certified V2G charger. The charger connects the EV to the grid and communicates with PowerSync’s smart
platform.
Smart Energy Management
The PowerSync app lets users set preferences: reserve battery power for daily drives; schedule charging during
off-peak periods, or allow the system to automatically sell surplus energy back to the grid when prices are highest.
Earnings & Savings
Users earn 0.12- 0.18 per kWh of energy fed back to the grid (rates vary by time of day). Typical EV
owners save 200- 400 annually on electricity bills and earn an additional 150- 300 in grid feedback rewards.
Service Packages
Package Duration Price (Monthly) Inclusions
Smart app access, energy feedback payments, 24/7 technical
Basic 12 months 19.99
support
Premiu 12 months 29.99 All Basic inclusions, free V2G charger installation, annual charger
m maintenance, priority grid access
Key Benefits
·Reduce reliance on fossil fuel power plants during peak demand, cutting carbon emissions by up to 1.2 tons per
EV annually.
·Help balance energy supply and demand, integrating more renewable energy sources into the grid.
· Operate automatically after setup, providing real-time energy usage, earnings tracking, and charger status
updates.
Eligibility Criteria
·Own a compatible EV (check the PowerSync website for the latest list of supported models).
·Have a valid home electricity connection (minimum 30A circuit capacity).
·Be aged 18+ with a registered UK address.
21. What is the author’s purpose in writing the text
A. To explain how to install V2G system.
B. To introduce PowerSync’s V2G service.
C. To recommend a renewable energy solution.
D. To compare different EV charging standards.
22. What can PowerSync’s V2G service help users do
A. Cut carbon emissions and get a payback.
B. Maintain EVs for free and enjoy 24/7 support.
C. Get free chargers and reduce electricity expenses.
D. Improve fuel efficiency and receive real-time updates.
23. Which requirement must users meet to access the V2G service
A. Purchase a charger provided by PowerSync.
B. Own a PowerSync-branded electric vehicle.
C. Have a home circuit capacity of at least 30A.
D. Pay for charger installation in both packages.
B
Cathy Winston is a sports nutritionist. Among her regulars are athletes: Cathy thrives on the variety, with each
new sport providing new challenges and a renewed appreciation of her chosen field of expertise. In her view,
dealing with athletes from various sport backgrounds helps her become seasoned, which is a key part of being a
successful nutritionist. “You have to understand nutrition and people, and then you can begin to work in this field,”
she says. “Besides, in tennis you must learn to be reactive, because you don’t know how long the match lasts.
However, it’s 90 minutes in football. So you know what you’re fueling for.”
Regardless of the sport, Cathy’s attitude remains the same — any athlete failing to respect nutrition is one
who is failing to fulfill their potential. It’s a key part of the training process. It’s not just something that you take
casually. She advises her athletes to hold nutrition in the same regard as they do their most crucial bit of equipment.
“Just as you wouldn’t forget to put your shin pads (护腿板) or your boots in your kit bag, don’t forget to put in
your drinks and your snacks. That informs how well you train, because you can’t get out if you haven’t put in.”
Nutritionists are sometimes unfairly represented as militant (斗志昂扬的) types telling what athletes can and
can’t eat. But Cathy insists that when to eat is more important than what. “It’s about when’s the right time to have it
in,” she says. It’s a message that Cathy says can take a while to sink in. “A lot of boxers say, ’but bananas make
you fat, right ’, and there’s this inherent belief that we mustn’t eat those kinds of things. But it’s not about what to
cut out. It’s about making sure that you’ve got the foundation right for health and performance. It’s that one size
fits one. It’s what works for you. To be an excellent athlete, you really need to be an exceptional eater.”
24. What does Cathy think about her job
A. It merely needs to understand nutrition and people.
B. It mainly focuses on the duration of matches.
C. It highly values experience and flexibility.
D. It hardly faces new challenges in every competition.
25. How does Cathy emphasize the importance of nutrition to athletes
A. By making a comparison. B. By telling a story.
C. By providing data. D. By analyzing a phenomenon.
26. According to Cathy, what is a fundamental principle behind successful sports nutrition
A. Cutting out specific foods from the diet.
B. Increasing the variety of foods.
C. Following a strict and militant diet plan.
D. Focusing on the timing of the diet.
27. What can be inferred from the passage
A. A good eater is a great athlete.
B. Food is less important than skills in the sports field.
C. Nutrition determines the results in the competition.
D. Nutritionists act as unsung heroes behind athletes.
C
Not long ago, I believed there were only two kinds of viewers: those who switched on subtitles (字幕) only
when the dialogue was unclear, and the unappreciative philistines (附庸风雅者) who left them on for no reason. I
insisted that words at the bottom of the screen stole the purity of film art — the faint tremble of an actor’s lip or
the perfect pause before a punchline.
Recent numbers, however, show that I am defending an empty castle. A 2021 survey found that 80% of
viewers aged 18-25 “always” or “often” use subtitles. What makes the young so absorbed in reading while
watching The cliché blames a short attention span, but the real answer is more complicated. Growing up with
phones in hand, Gen-Z treat television as only one panel in a multimedia mosaic (拼接画). The survey shows that
80% of them “double-screen”, texting or scrolling while the show runs. Subtitles act like a quick download: a
glance gives the line, the eye returns to the phone, and no plot is lost. Efficiency wins over pure absorption.
Social media has pushed the habit further. On TikTok or Instagram, subtitles appear by default (默认); many
creators even design videos around rapid-fire (接二连三的) text that is impossible to switch off. Algorithms (算法)
reward this choice: clips with open subtitles engage more viewers’ attention and are more likely to crop up in
searches. Subtitles have turned from an accessibility tool into a business strategy.
The change is not always edies lose timing when the joke is visible before it is spoken; subtle
acting is flattened into text. My flatmate, once annoyed by words on the screen, now leaves them on even for films.
“I don’t notice I’m reading,” she said with a shrug, “but I can’t turn them off either.” Studies show the practice
improves recall of plot details, yet there is no evidence that it sharpens reading skills.
Perhaps the deeper shift is in our purpose: we watch to keep up, not to sink in. After work, we cuddle up on
the sofa longing not for beauty or surprise, but for the quiet satisfaction of “comprehension”. Television was meant
to be an escape; now it is another task we efficiently finish.
28. Why do Gen-Z viewers use subtitles while watching TV
A. They have short attention spans.
B. They want to sharpen their reading skills.
C. They operate multiple functions meanwhile.
D. They find dialogues unclear.
29. Why do videos with subtitles enjoy greater popularity on social media
A. They are more accessible for viewers.
B. Algorithms favor them and promote them more.
C. Rapid-fire subtitles appear by default.
D. They enhance the function of algorithms.
30. What is the author’s attitude towards the widespread use of subtitles
A. Supportive. B. Critical.
C. Neutral. D. Indifferent.
31. What can be a suitable title for the text
A. Why We Should All Turn Off Subtitles
B. How Subtitles Ruin Film Art
C. From Aid to Necessity: The Subtitle Revolution
D. The Business of Subtitles: How Algorithms Drive Viewer Habits
D
When driving, Clara-Marina Martinez takes down any unusual behaviour she sees on the road. She then feeds
these into machine-learning algorithms, a form of AI, which are intended to produce a system reliable enough for a
car to drive itself without any disturbance from the driver, and cope with all situations on the road. But this proving
hard to achieve, carmakers choose to scale back many attempts to do so. Last year, for instance, Uber, a
‘ride-hailing’ service, sold off its unit developing self-driving cars at a low price.
Autonomous vehicles are boasted as being not just convenient but potentially safer. However, just as people
take time to learn how to drive safely, machines are no exception. The RAND Corporation, an American ’
think-tank’, calculates that to develop a system 20% safer than a human driver, a fleet of 100 self-driving cars
would have to operate 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and cover 14 billion kilometres. At average road speeds,
that would take about 400 years.
Carmakers such as Porsche therefore accelerate the development process using simulators (模拟器 ). These
teach software about danger only rarely encountered in reality. Dr Martinez and her colleagues employ “game
engines”, the programs that generate photo realistic images in computer games, to do this. These are used to create
virtual worlds through which the software can drive.
How quickly, if ever, all this will translate into reality remains to be seen. Both regulators and customers will
need to overcome doubt that a software driver really can be safer than humans. From Porsche’s point of view,
though, there is one other relevant question. Given that much of the reason for owning a sports car is for owners to
show off what they regard as their driving skills, just how big a market will there be for a version where software
takes those boasting rights away
32. What do the underlined words “scale back” mean in Paragraph 1
A. Make B. Reduce C. Encourage D. Overlook
33. The learning process of autonomous vehicles’ safe driving can be described as ______.
A. thought-provoking B. fast-paced
C. time-consuming D. well-designed
34. What challenge do autonomous vehicles bring to Porsche
A. Ensuring the pleasure of driving. B. Making their sports cars affordable.
C. Removing public doubts about safety. D. Integrating game engines into their vehicles.
35. What is the main idea of the passage
A. Porsche’s sports cars are facing serious market risks.
B. Simulators are the most important technology for self-driving cars.
C. Fully reliable and widely accepted self-driving cars still face major challenges.
D. Machine learning algorithms will soon replace human drivers completely.
第二节(共 5小题;每小题 2.5分,满分 12.5分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
How to communicate complex information
Did you ever have to read a presentation where you felt like you’re lost in confusing terms, data and concepts
Are you giving others this same experience 36. ______. But there are ways you can simplify your presentation and
reengage your audience. Here’s how you can get complex information across.
Use interactive content. It gets the readers more involved in your presentation by letting them play an active
part. 37. ______. Beyond that, questionnaires and chatbots provide personalized and specific answers to readers as
part of your presentation. Making your presentation interactive used to be hard, but now you can just use Storydoc.
Go make your first interactive presentation. It’s easy as pie.
38. ______. No one will read a presentation with a thousand words. Do everyone a favor and use images.
Images can be super effective at communicating complex information and save you a lot of needless text. In fact,
visual representation of data and concepts can often convey what words cannot. Use diagrams and images to
illustrate your points and simplify the complex.
Narrate your content. 39. ______. Whether it’s through text to speech AI or video bubbles, centering your
presentation around a story can help guide your audience through the complexity, making it more digestible,
engaging, and memorable.
Use examples and tables. They can help explain clearly the complexity of ideas for they are what we’ve
already known and understood. 40. ______. More importantly, the real secret lies in selecting examples that are not
just familiar but also deeply relevant — those are the ones that will truly ring with your listeners.
A. Make every word count
B. Show, don’t tell
C. This makes the complex concepts less new and more familiar
D. If you don’t sound excited, the listeners won’t feel excited either
E. Communicating complex information is a common challenge in presentations
F. Storytelling is another powerful tool for communicating complex concepts
G. For example, allow them to choose the content route they wish to take and control the pace
第三部分 语言运用(共两节,满分 30分)
第一节(共 15小题;每小题 1分,满分 15分)
阅读下面短文,从每题所给的 A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。
Boyan Slat spent his early childhood in Delft, a historic university town known for its creative atmosphere.
From the age of two, he showed a natural 41. ________ for invention, engaging in projects like building tree
houses in his backyard. This early creativity was probably 42. ________ by his father’s artistic career.
His multicultural background — combining Dutch, British, and Croatian influences — 43. ________ him to
different ways of thinking from a young age, shaping a wide worldview that focused on problem-solving and global
awareness. During his teenage years, this 44. ________ began to connect with his interests in oceanic environments,
giving him the key 45. ________ that large-scale technological solutions might be possible.
While on vacation in Greece at 16 years old, Boyan went scuba diving and saw more plastic bags than fish in
the sea, which left him 46. ________. “Why can’t we just clean this up ” He started looking further into the
problem, 47. ________ possible technological solutions to ocean plastic pollution, and worked hard to 48.
________ practical knowledge through a school project that helped develop his ideas. In late 2012, he 49.
________ these ideas at a TEDx conference.
At first, 50. ________ with only ?300 of saved pocket money, he struggled to make progress. However,
everything changed in February 2013 when his TEDx video suddenly became 51. ________ online, and the
attention that followed allowed Boyan to 52. ________ The Ocean Cleanup. Boyan then gathered a team of
volunteers and launched a crowdfunding campaign, which 53. ________ a year-long feasibility (可行性) study —
the first real step in bringing Boyan’s technological solutions to life. That is how Boyan turned his dream into 54.
________.
Today, The Ocean Cleanup is actively cleaning up the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and has been using
interceptors (拦截器) in some of the world’s most polluted rivers to 55. ________ plastic from reaching the ocean
in the first place.
41. A. motivation B. talent C. intelligence D. intention
42. A. promoted B. inspired C. disturbed D. controlled
43. A. exposed B. applied C. related D. adjusted
44. A. principle B. basis C. origin D. source
45. A. judgment B. statement C. insight D. evidence
46. A. doubting B. wondering C. confirming D. concluding
47. A. exploring B. abandoning C. replacing D. rejecting
48. A. acquire B. convey C. recognize D. classify
49. A. delivered B. addressed C. introduced D. presented
50. A. packed B. provided C. armed D. connected
51. A. academic B. viral C. formal D. stable
52. A. construct B. establish C. contribute D. circulate
53. A. financed B. guided C. evaluated D. rejected
54. A. reality B. ambition C. memory D. fantasy
55. A. distinguish B. keep C. separate D. distract
第二节(共 10小题;每小题 1.5分,满分 15分)
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入 1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
Approximately 4000 years following the last glacial period, hunter-gatherer communities encountered another
sudden climate shift that forced rapid adaptation to 56. ________ (significant) colder conditions. The event, 57.
________ (occur) 8200 years ago, brought about temperature declines of up to 6°C within mere decades.
Meanwhile, the breakaway of a Scotland-sized landmass from the Norwegian continental shelf generated a massive
tsunami that completed Britain’s geographical 58. ________ (separate) from mainland Europe.
59. ________ these severe environmental challenges, northern hemisphere (半球) populations demonstrated
remarkable toughness and resilience. Through it all, people across the northern hemisphere survived, some by
packing up and moving, others by sticking it out. Rick Schulting from the University of Oxford notes: “These
communities were not passive victims but actively adapted to changing circumstances.”
While previous research had examined regional impacts, Schulting’s comprehensive study compared
archaeological evidence and environmental records across northwestern Europe and southern Siberia. To
understand 60. ________ they adapted, scientists compared archaeological findings, such as burial sites and ancient
remains, with environmental evidence 61. ________ (preserve) in ancient lake beds. This combination of clues
allowed them to reconstruct past changes in climate and landscape with great 62. ________ (precise).
Adaptation strategies 63. ________ (vary) greatly across regions. Coastal communities in Norway’s Oslofjord
expanded through increased reliance on marine resources like fish and seals, while Lake Baikal populations showed
minimal disruption due to stable water-based supplies. In contrast, northwestern Russian groups around Lake
Onega exhibited unusual burial patterns suggesting strategic concentration near reliable food sources, whereas
Scottish communities abandoned coastal settlements entirely, likely moving inland to survive the prolonged cold
period.
This ancient climate event provides crucial insights into human responses to environmental crises. 64.
________ (researchers emphasize), the event serves as 65. ________ (critical case study) for understanding how
modern societies might address contemporary climate challenges, demonstrating that human adaptability remains
essential for survival in changing environments.
第四部分 写作(共两节,满分 40分)
第一节(满分 15分)
假定你是校绿化委员会成员李华,你校将开展“校园植物认养(Campus Plant Adoption)”活动。请用
英文写一则通知,内容包括:
1.活动目的;
2.认养规则;
3.报名方式。
注意:1.写作词数应为 80左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Notice
Dear fellow students,
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
School Greening Committee
第二节(满分 25分)
阅读下面材料,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
“Mark, what a mess!” Mr. Thompson, the art teacher, exclaimed as he surveyed the paint-splattered (泼洒)
Mark. Mark looked down at his paint-covered clothes and the paint on the floor. His face turned bright red, and he
whispered, “I’m sorry, Mr. Thompson. I was trying to mix the perfect shade of ocean blue for my seascape (海景)
painting, but I accidentally knocked over the paint bottle.”
The students around him laughed quietly, and Mark felt a lump (肿块) form in his throat. It was the school’s
annual art exhibition coming up, and this painting was his entry. Now, not only was his work destroyed, but he had
also made a huge mess in the art room. Mr. Thompson sighed, “Clean this up immediately, Mark. And I hope you
can fix your painting before the deadline. Remember what we learned about color theory last week — sometimes
unexpected combinations lead to the most beautiful results.”
With his head hung low, Mark cleaned the floor. When he finally sat back down to his painting, he realized
that most of the blue paint was gone, and the canvas (画布) was made dirty. The once-promising seascape now
looked like a chaotic mess. Mark bit his lip, his eyes welling up with tears. He glanced around the room, seeing his
classmates focused on their nearly-finished masterpieces.
Just then, the school bell rang, signaling the end of the art class. Mark slowly packed his things. As he walked
out of the art room, the gray sky outside seemed to mirror his mood. A light rain started to fall, and Mark pulled up
his hood (风帽), not caring that the raindrops were making dark spots on his already-stained clothes.
He was so lost in his thoughts that he didn’t notice his best friend, Alex, walking beside him. “Hey, Mark,
what’s wrong ” Alex asked, with an expression of concern on his face. Mark told him everything. “I spent hours
trying to get that perfect blue for the ocean waves,” Mark sighed. “Without it, my whole painting is ruined.” Alex
patted him on the back and said, “Don’t worry, we’ll figure it out. Let’s go to the art supply room and see if there’s
any blue paint left.”
注意:
1.续写词数应为 150左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Upon entering the supply room, Mark’s heart sank._______________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Two days later, Mark stood nervously beside his reborn painting at the exhibition.______________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________

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