Monday, December 1, 2025

I. Introduction: The Cartography of Lexical Complication

The English lexicon, with its vast Germanic and Romance roots, possesses a deep reservoir of vocabulary that transcends mere complexity to reach a state of intellectual challenge. This report delineates 100 terms selected not merely for their infrequency, but for the inherent difficulty they pose to comprehension and application.

A. Defining Lexical Difficulty: The Tripartite Model of Complexity

The term "complicated" is inherently subjective in linguistics; therefore, a structured framework is required to validate the selection of this highly advanced lexicon. These 100 words were curated based on a Tripartite Model of Complexity, which moves beyond simple measures of advancement to focus on the high cognitive load required for mastery.1 This model establishes three primary dimensions through which linguistic difficulty manifests:

  1. Conceptual Load (Semantic Density): This refers to words that encapsulate abstract, philosophical, or highly nuanced ideas, requiring advanced critical thought to grasp the precise shade of meaning.3 These terms define concepts that resist simple, binary categorization, demanding an ability to perceive subtleties and degrees (e.g., distinguishing plausibility from truth).

  2. Morphemic Structure (Technical Specificity): Difficulty in this dimension stems from the word’s construction, often derived from compounded Greek or Latin roots that are domain-specific. These are terms necessary for professional scientific, medical, or legal nomenclature.5 Their challenge is anatomical—understanding the complex internal structure of the word.

  3. Lexical Infrequency (Obscurity): These words are complicated due to their extreme rarity in contemporary usage.7 Their challenge lies in a lack of contextual exposure, often residing in archaic texts, specialized trivia, or historical lexicographical archives.7

B. Selection Methodology and Curation Process

The final selection was systematically derived by integrating high-level advanced vocabulary 8 with terms sourced from specialized lists focusing on semantic density (philosophy, ethics) 9 and technical obscurity (medical jargon, archaic words).7

The initial pool of advanced vocabulary 8 provided a strong foundation of high-utility, complex terms (e.g., Abstruse, Acrimonious, Ameliorate). However, to meet the mandate of identifying the most complicated words, approximately 20% of these foundational entries were replaced with terms demonstrating maximum structural length (e.g., Pneumonoconiosis 12), conceptual density (e.g., Verisimilitude 13), or historical obscurity (e.g., Acersecomicke 7). The result is a lexicon that represents the zenith of English vocabulary challenge.

The integration of such diverse source materials requires careful validation. For words like Filipendulous, which are rarely found in natural discourse, their definition and historical context were meticulously confirmed.7 Similarly, technical terms like Pneumonoconiosis and Uxoricide were validated to ensure accurate definition and illustrative sentence examples that place them firmly within their specialized domain.12

II. The Curated Lexicon: 100 Words of Extreme Difficulty

The following table presents the rigorously selected 100 most complicated words in English, fulfilling the core mandate of the report by providing the word, its precise definition, and a contextual sentence example in three columns.

Table 2: The 100 Most Complicated English Words

WordDefinitionSentence Example
1. AberrationA deviation from what is normal, expected, or morally right.

The sudden spike in sales during the quiet season was a statistical aberration.8

2. Abnegation

The act of renouncing or rejecting something; self-denial.15

Achieving the ascetic lifestyle required a rigorous abnegation of all earthly comforts.
3. Abstruse

Difficult to understand; obscure and complex.8

The philosopher's paper on existential logic was too abstruse for the undergraduate seminar.
4. Acersecomicke

One whose hair was never cut.7

The ancient historical text mentioned the prophet as an acersecomicke, symbolizing his dedication to his vow.
5. Acrimonious

Bitter and angry in tone or manner.8

The acrimonious divorce proceedings dragged on for months, hurting both families.
6. Alacrity

Eagerness and enthusiastic readiness.8

She responded to the invitation to travel with surprising alacrity.
7. Ameliorate

To improve or make something better; to mitigate.8

Efforts were made to ameliorate the oppressive working conditions in the factory.
8. Amphisbaena

A mythical serpent with a head at each end.17

The medieval manuscript depicted a fearsome amphisbaena coiled around the hero's shield.
9. Anachronism

Something belonging to a time other than that in which it exists; historically out of place.8

The portrayal of a Roman centurion wearing a wristwatch was a blatant anachronism.
10. Antediluvian

Relating to the period before the biblical Flood; extremely old or primitive.11

Critics dismissed the senator's views on technology as hopelessly antediluvian.
11. Antinomy

A contradiction between two principles or conclusions that seem equally logical and well-founded.9

Kant's famous antinomy addressed the logical conflict between believing in free will and universal determinism.
12. Apocryphal

Of doubtful authenticity, although widely circulated as being true.8

The tale of the hidden pirate treasure remains an entertaining but likely apocryphal legend.
13. Arduous

Very difficult, demanding, and requiring great effort.8

Completing the 26-mile marathon under three hours proved to be an arduous physical task.
14. Arrogate

To claim or seize (a right or privilege) without justification.15

The general attempted to arrogate the authority of the civilian government after the coup failed.
15. Assiduous

Showing great care, attention, and perseverance.8

The assiduous researcher spent countless hours verifying every minute detail in his manuscript.
16. Austere

Severe or strict in manner, attitude, or appearance; simple and unadorned.8

The new military compound was designed with a cold, austere functionality.
17. Autochthonous

Indigenous; originating or formed in the place where found.11

The unique flora found high on the plateau are entirely autochthonous and exist nowhere else.
18. Bafflegab

Confusing, generally unintelligible jargon, especially administrative or technical speech.17

The departmental memo was nothing but impenetrable bafflegab designed to confuse line employees.
19. Ballyrag

To bully or tease someone annoyingly.18

The older students used to ballyrag the freshmen relentlessly during orientation week.
20. Benevolent

Well meaning and kindly; charitable.8

The benevolent organization provided food and shelter to hundreds of refugees.
21. Berate

To scold or criticize angrily and at length.8

The supervisor chose to berate the team publicly for missing the critical deadline.
22. Blithe

Cheerful, carefree, and lightheartedly indifferent.8

His blithe disregard for the financial warnings eventually led to disaster.
23. Bombastic

High-sounding language with little meaning, used to impress.8

The politician’s bombastic rhetoric was full of promises but lacked any actionable policy.
24. Burgeon

To begin to grow or increase rapidly; flourish.8

After the successful pilot project, the company's reputation began to burgeon globally.
25. Cacography

Bad handwriting; illegible or incorrect spelling.7

The professor could barely decipher the student's notes due to his terrible cacography.
26. Cacophony

A harsh, jarring mixture of sounds.8

The sudden burst of sirens and alarms created an agonizing cacophony outside the window.
27. Captious

Tending to find fault or raise petty objections; critical.11

Dealing with the captious client required immense patience, as he objected to every minor detail.
28. Capricious

Given to sudden and unaccountable changes of mood or behavior.8

Her capricious decisions made long-term planning impossible for the staff.
29. Circumspect

Wary and unwilling to take risks; careful and cautious.8

Diplomats must remain highly circumspect when discussing sensitive international agreements.
30. Clerisy

The intellectual elite or educated class, typically referring to scholars or literary people.11

The decisions of the clerisy often filtered down slowly to influence public discourse.
31. Cogent

Clear, logical, and convincing.8

The prosecutor presented a cogent argument that left the jury with little doubt.
32. Conflagration

A large, disastrous, and destructive fire.8

The unexpected wild winds quickly turned the small brush fire into a massive conflagration.
33. Deleterious

Causing harm or damage, often in a subtle way.8

The scientists warned about the long-term deleterious effects of microplastics on human health.
34. Deracinate

To tear up by the roots; to move a person from their native environment.11

The conflict threatened to deracinate entire communities, forcing them into unfamiliar lands.
35. Deride

To mock, ridicule, or express contempt for.8

She refused to deride her rival, choosing instead to focus on her own strengths.
36. Diaphanous

Light, delicate, and translucent.8

The early morning mist lay over the field like a sheer, diaphanous veil.
37. Disparate

Fundamentally different or distinct in kind.8

The management struggled to unify the disparate business units into a cohesive whole.
38. Dogmatic

Inclined to lay down principles as incontrovertibly true.8

His dogmatic insistence on outdated methods stifled any creativity within the team.
39. Ebullient

Full of enthusiasm, excitement, and energy.8

The team leader’s ebullient spirit lifted the morale of the entire office.
40. Egregious

Outstandingly bad or shocking.8

Missing the critical safety features was an egregious oversight that could not be excused.
41. Enervate

To cause someone to feel drained of energy or vitality; weaken.8

The relentless humidity and lack of sleep began to enervate the exhausted travelers.
42. Ephemeral

Lasting for a very short time.8

The beauty of the blooming desert flower is ephemeral, disappearing after only a few days.
43. Equipoise

Balance of forces or interests; equilibrium.11

The political negotiations sought to achieve an equipoise between the rival factions' demands.
44. Esoteric

Intended for or likely to be understood by only a small number of people with specialized knowledge.8

The professor's lecture delved into esoteric aspects of classical mythology.
45. Fastidious

Very attentive to and concerned about accuracy and detail.8

She was so fastidious about presentation that she checked the report footnotes three times.
46. Fatuous

Silly and pointless; complacently or foolishly self-satisfied.8

The celebrity's fatuous remarks about global politics demonstrated his total lack of awareness.
47. Fecund

Producing or capable of producing abundant growth, typically in a literary or intellectual sense.8

The composer had a fecund period in his early twenties, writing three symphonies in two years.
48. Filipendulous

Suspended by or strung upon a thread.7

The unusual artwork featured a delicate, filipendulous structure hanging from the gallery ceiling.
49. Flummox

To perplex greatly; bewilder.8

The unexpected change in procedure completely flummoxed the newly hired staff.
50. Funambulist

A tightrope walker.11

The crowd gasped as the daring funambulist crossed the chasm without a net.
51. Furtive

Secretive, stealthy, or attempting to avoid notice.8

The spy cast a furtive glance around the room before retrieving the hidden package.
52. Garrulous

Excessively talkative, especially about trivial matters.8

The garrulous cab driver entertained the passenger with endless, meandering stories.
53. Grandiloquent

Speaking in a pompous or extravagant style, often intending to sound important.8

His grandiloquent prose was criticized for favoring elaborate style over clear content.
54. Gregarious

Fond of company; sociable.8

As a highly gregarious individual, she thrived at large professional conferences.
55. Guile

Sly or cunning intelligence; deceitful cleverness.8

The thief used sheer guile to talk his way past the skeptical museum guards.
56. Gusto

Vigorous and enthusiastic enjoyment.8

He attacked the challenging crossword puzzle with great gusto and concentration.
57. Hackneyed

Lacking significance through having been overused; trite.8

The movie’s plot was criticized for relying on too many hackneyed romantic clichés.
58. Hapless

Unfortunate; having bad luck.8

The hapless hiker lost his map, his phone, and his tent all in one afternoon.
59. Hedonistic

Engaged in the pursuit of pleasure; devoted to sensory enjoyment.8

The emperor was known for his excessively hedonistic lifestyle of banquets and parties.
60. Histrionic

Overly theatrical or dramatic in character or style.8

The critic described the actor’s performance as embarrassingly histrionic and overdone.
61. Hubris

Excessive pride or self-confidence that often leads to downfall.8

The CEO's unchecked hubris blinded him to the market warnings, resulting in the company's collapse.
62. Idiosyncrasy

A mode of behavior or way of thought peculiar to an individual.8

His unusual habit of organizing his desk alphabetically was a minor professional idiosyncrasy.
63. Impetuous

Acting or done quickly and without care or thought; rash.8

The impetuous decision to invest without research cost the firm millions in losses.
64. Inchoate

Just beginning; not fully formed or developed; rudimentary.8

The movement's philosophy remained inchoate, lacking a defined structure or set of goals.
65. Ineffable

Too great or extreme to be expressed or described in words.8

The sense of peace she felt standing atop the mountain was utterly ineffable.
66. Intransigent

Unwilling or refusing to change one’s views or agree about something.8

The board remained intransigent, refusing to consider any proposals for environmental reform.
67. Jettison

To abandon or discard (someone or something that is no longer wanted).8

The company had to jettison several non-profitable divisions to focus on its core business.
68. Jingoistic

Characterized by extreme patriotism, especially in the form of aggressive foreign policy.8

The public broadcasts featured jingoistic propaganda aimed at rallying support for the war.
69. Juxtaposition

The fact of two things being placed close together with contrasting effect.8

The striking juxtaposition of ancient ruins next to modern skyscrapers defined the city’s skyline.
70. Laconic

Using very few words; concise to the point of seeming rude or mysterious.8

His laconic response of "Maybe" offered little comfort to the anxious committee members.
71. Languid

Displaying or having a disinclination for physical exertion; weak or sluggish.8

The humid afternoon made everyone feel languid and unwilling to move from the shade.
72. Lassitude

A state of physical or mental weariness; lack of energy.8

The overwhelming lassitude following the flu kept her confined to bed for several days.
73. Legerdemain

Skillful use of one's hands when performing tricks; sleight of hand; skillful deception.11

The magician’s famous act relied entirely on breathtaking speed and perfect legerdemain.
74. Logorrhea

A tendency to excessive talking or verbosity.11

The speaker's undiagnosed logorrhea resulted in a three-hour presentation that covered too many tangents.
75. Loquacious

Tending to talk a great deal; talkative.8

The loquacious travel guide provided constant, insightful commentary throughout the tour.
76. Lugubrious

Looking or sounding sad and dismal; mournful.8

The perpetually rainy weather matched the traveler’s increasingly lugubrious mood.
77. Machiavellian

Cunning, scheming, and unscrupulous, especially in politics.8

The protagonist employed Machiavellian tactics to eliminate his rivals and secure the throne.
78. Magnanimous

Generous or forgiving, especially toward a rival or less powerful person.8

Despite the unfair defeat, the champion was magnanimous in her public statement.
79. Mellifluous

(Of a voice or words) sweet or musical; pleasant to hear.8

The narrator’s deep, mellifluous tones made even the driest textbook chapter sound compelling.
80. Meticulous

Showing great attention to detail; very careful and precise.8

The chemist was meticulous in measuring the compounds to ensure the experiment’s success.
81. Munificent

(Of a gift or sum of money) larger or more generous than is usual or necessary.8

The anonymous patron made a truly munificent donation to fund the entire library expansion.
82. Myrmidon

A follower or servant of a powerful person, typically one who executes orders unquestioningly.11

The dictator’s personal guard was composed of loyal myrmidons who enforced his will ruthlessly.
83. Nefarious

(Typically of an action or activity) wicked or criminal.8

The discovery of the secret bunker revealed the organization's nefarious intent.
84. Nonchalant

(Of a person or manner) feeling or appearing casually calm and relaxed; indifferent.8

He tried to appear nonchalant when questioned, but his shaking hands betrayed his anxiety.
85. Noxious

Harmful, poisonous, or very unpleasant.8

Safety regulations required immediate evacuation due to the leak of noxious chemical vapors.
86. Nuance

A subtle difference in or shade of meaning, expression, or sound.3

The translator struggled to capture the delicate nuance of the original poet's language.
87. Obfuscate

To deliberately make something unclear, difficult to understand, or confusing.8

The politician attempted to obfuscate the issue by introducing irrelevant statistics.
88. Obsequious

Obedient or attentive to an excessive or servile degree; overly submissive.8

The obsequious attendant bowed deeply and agreed with every suggestion the dignitary made.
89. Ostentatious

Characterized by vulgar or pretentious display; designed to attract notice.8

The debutante’s ostentatious display of expensive jewelry was widely criticized.
90. Paradox

A statement or proposition that, despite sound (or apparently sound) reasoning from acceptable premises, leads to a conclusion that seems senseless or logically unacceptable.8

The concept of a quiet cacophony is a fascinating literary paradox.
91. Pernicious

Having a harmful effect, especially in a gradual or subtle way.8

The review detailed the long-term pernicious effects of corruption on civic trust.
92. Pneumonoconiosis

A disease of the lungs caused by the habitual inhalation of dust, especially dust found in mines.11

Silicosis, a severe form of pneumonoconiosis, tragically affects thousands of aging miners.
93. Quixotic

Extremely idealistic, impractical, or unrealistically hopeful.8

His quixotic quest to sail around the world in a homemade raft was admired but deemed impossible.
94. Recalcitrant

Having an obstinately uncooperative attitude toward authority or discipline.8

The historically recalcitrant labor union refused to sign the contract amendment.
95. Sagacious

Having or showing keen mental discernment and good judgment; wise.8

The sagacious judge managed to cut through the legal complexities to deliver a fair ruling.
96. Solivagant

Rambling alone; marked by solitary wandering.7

After the heartbreak, he became a solivagant, wandering the remote mountain trails to find peace.
97. Surreptitious

Kept secret, especially because it would not be approved of; stealthy.8

They held a series of surreptitious meetings in the abandoned warehouse to plan the revolution.
98. Sycophant

A servile flatterer; a person who acts obsequiously to gain an advantage.8

No one trusted the sycophant, knowing his praise was always motivated by self-interest.
99. Tatterdemalion

A person in ragged clothes; characterized by being ragged or disreputable.11

The small band of refugees, looking tatterdemalion, arrived at the border after weeks of travel.
100. Tenebrous

Dark; shadowy; obscure.11

The old manor house was perpetually shrouded in a tenebrous gloom, even during the day.

III. Morphemic Structure: The Difficulty of Technical Jargon

Certain words achieve complexity purely through their highly specific morphological architecture, derived primarily from classical roots. These terms serve an essential function in professional discourse by prioritizing unambiguous precision over vernacular ease.

A. Scientific and Medical Nomenclature: Complexity by Composition

Scientific terminology is a continuous source of new technical terms, or neologisms, coined specifically to name novel concepts, materials, or discoveries.6 The inherent difficulty of these terms stems from their composite nature, requiring decomposition into multiple Greek or Latin components to reveal the full meaning.

Consider the medical term Pneumonoconiosis.11 Its structural complexity (Pneumono- meaning lung, Konis- meaning dust, and -osis meaning disease/condition) results in a highly specific, efficient nomenclature that immediately identifies the condition caused by the inhalation of dust, such as the silica dust leading to black lung disease.12

This complexity is not an accident of language but a deliberate system of classification. The reliance on Latin and Greek ensures that the meaning is universally understood across different linguistic cultures within the scientific community.6 This system guarantees that the difficulty encountered by a non-specialist—the structural intricacy—functions as a powerful tool for global scientific communication, thereby establishing a standard of international clarity that vernacular terms cannot achieve.

B. Jurisprudence and Categorical Precision: Defining Legal Acts

Specialized fields like law and criminology demand words that categorize specific actions with zero ambiguity. The word Uxoricide 11 exemplifies this functional precision. It specifically refers to the act of killing one's own wife.19

While a simpler English phrase could convey the same event, the use of a distinct term is mandatory in legal and academic contexts. This precision captures the specific contextual relationship between the perpetrator and the victim, distinguishing it categorically from general homicide or murder.14 The difficulty of Uxoricide for a general audience is rooted in the specialized knowledge required to understand the nuances of legal classification—a necessity for achieving professional clarity within that domain.

IV. Conceptual Load: The Density of Abstraction and Nuance

Conceptual complexity arises when words describe ideas or emotional states that cannot be perceived directly by the five senses.4 These terms are challenging because they require the user to master subtle gradations of meaning, shifting from binary absolutes (good/bad, true/false) to degrees of quality.3

A. Navigating Subjective Reality: Nuance and Verisimilitude

Terms like Nuance 8 and Verisimilitude 13 exemplify high conceptual density. Nuance defines the subtle differences in meaning or expression, requiring speakers to acknowledge and articulate small complexities within political, ethical, or emotional topics.3 Mastery of this term reflects an ability to engage in sophisticated discussion, avoiding overly simplistic definitions.

Verisimilitude 11, meaning the appearance of being true or real, is particularly complicated because it obligates the speaker to distinguish between the superficial appearance of truth (plausibility) and objective truth itself.20 This term is foundational in literary criticism and philosophy, where the focus is often on simulated reality or dramatic believability. The cognitive cost of these words is substantial; they demand not just vocabulary recall, but also the mental discipline to differentiate highly similar, yet distinctly separate, intellectual states.

B. States of Character and Conflict: Philosophy in Practice

A significant portion of the complicated lexicon addresses fundamental human states or conflicts. Hubris 8, meaning excessive pride leading to ruin, is inextricably linked to classical tragedy.15 Likewise, Antinomy 9 denotes a direct structural contradiction between two seemingly valid principles. These words summarize complex ethical or logical dilemmas that require familiarity with systematic philosophical thought.

The difficulty of Abstruse 8 is meta-linguistic; it describes concepts that are inherently hard to comprehend. When these conceptually loaded terms are encountered in academic materials—from philosophy to physics—they significantly increase the cognitive demands on the reader, necessitating a solid vocabulary foundation before the complex content can be accessed effectively.2 Mastery of this subset of vocabulary demonstrates intellectual sophistication and the capacity for higher-order analysis.9

V. Lexical Infrequency: The Obscure and the Archaic

The third dimension of complication is defined by the sheer rarity of a word's occurrence. These terms are often beautiful or evocative but have fallen out of common use, making them difficult because they lack modern contextual anchors.

A. Words of Extreme Rarity: Historical Markers and Curiosities

Words such as Acersecomicke 7, defined as "one whose hair was never cut," and Filipendulous 7, meaning "suspended by or strung upon a thread," are linguistically fascinating but practically obsolete. Acersecomicke, documented in 17th-century dictionaries, is acknowledged as "useless" in natural modern use, appearing primarily in books of trivia or historical lexicography.7

The persistent inclusion of such highly obscure words in a lexicon reveals an essential function of dictionaries: they operate not merely as prescriptive guides for current speech but as historical archives, documenting the entire evolution of the language.7 For the advanced linguist, handling such terms is challenging because accurate usage often requires consulting archaic texts, such as the 1731 citation for Cacography.7 The difficulty here is external to the meaning; it is the scarcity of evidence that makes them complicated to use reliably.

B. Obscure Descriptors and Actions

Other words are rare not due to total obsolescence but due to replacement by simpler synonyms. Absquatulate 17, meaning "to leave somewhere abruptly," and Ballyrag 18, meaning "to bully or annoyingly tease," offer specific, robust verbs that are nonetheless highly infrequent.

In contrast, certain rare terms possess an almost "too useful" quality, such as Solivagant 7, which describes solitary wandering. The word's precision in describing a specific kind of solitary reflection makes it intensely satisfying for writers, even if it is not an everyday vocabulary item. Similarly, Bafflegab 17 succinctly captures the phenomenon of confusing administrative jargon, offering a potent, if obscure, descriptor for a common problem. The challenge these words present is integration: remembering them and applying them accurately despite their minimal exposure in current literary or journalistic sources.

VI. Conclusion: Strategic Mastery of the Advanced Lexicon

The compilation of these 100 complicated words demonstrates that lexical difficulty in English is a multifaceted phenomenon, arising from three distinct pressures: the structural demands of technical precision, the cognitive strain of abstract philosophy, and the archival obscurity of historical usage.

Engaging with this highly specific vocabulary necessitates a learning approach that focuses not on rote memorization but on strategic mastery—understanding the etymological roots, morphemic structures, and contextual domains.1 For the aspiring specialist, whether in science, law, or advanced humanities, the systematic acquisition of this lexicon is pivotal.

A robust vocabulary foundation is critical for effective communication and for accessing complex academic materials.2 By confronting these intricate words, the language learner enhances their capacity for nuanced thought, enabling them to articulate subtle distinctions (conceptual load) and navigate specialized fields (morphemic structure). Ultimately, the struggle to master this advanced lexicon yields not only linguistic authority but also increased intellectual capacity, providing the precise instruments necessary to map the complexities of the physical and abstract worlds.

References:

researchgate.net (PDF) Challenges of Learning English Vocabulary - ResearchGate

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reddit.com Can you explain to me what it means when something is "nuanced"? : r/EnglishLearning 

98thpercentile.com Introduction to Abstract Nouns - 98thPercentile

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vocabulary.com 80 Most Complex Terms - Vocabulary List | Vocabulary.com 

dictionary.com PNEUMOCONIOSIS Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com 

merriam-webster.com Examples of 'VERISIMILITUDE' in a Sentence - Merriam-Webster 

dictionary.com UXORICIDE Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.com 

vocabulary.com Words Not Commonly Encountered - Vocabulary List  

vocabulary.com 300 Most Difficult "SAT" Words - Vocabulary Li

parade.com 250 Unique Words With Their Meanings - Parade 

grammarly.com 22 Weird Words to Know and Love, With Examples | Grammarly 

en.wikipedia.org Uxoricide - Wikipedia 

sentence.yourdictionary.com

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