First use of “packing” as in carrying a gun





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A friend is using the sentence, “Nobody was packing there,” in an historical novel set in the 1885-90 timeframe.



I suspect “packing” was not used in this slang format until 30-40 years later?



Does anyone have corroboration?










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  • Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago











  • Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

    – JEL
    20 secs ago


















1















A friend is using the sentence, “Nobody was packing there,” in an historical novel set in the 1885-90 timeframe.



I suspect “packing” was not used in this slang format until 30-40 years later?



Does anyone have corroboration?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago











  • Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

    – JEL
    20 secs ago














1












1








1








A friend is using the sentence, “Nobody was packing there,” in an historical novel set in the 1885-90 timeframe.



I suspect “packing” was not used in this slang format until 30-40 years later?



Does anyone have corroboration?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












A friend is using the sentence, “Nobody was packing there,” in an historical novel set in the 1885-90 timeframe.



I suspect “packing” was not used in this slang format until 30-40 years later?



Does anyone have corroboration?







etymology






share|improve this question







New contributor




Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 4 hours ago









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New contributor





Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Rich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago











  • Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

    – JEL
    20 secs ago



















  • Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago











  • Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

    – JEL
    20 secs ago

















Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

– Ubi hatt
3 hours ago





Possible duplicate of What does “packing heat” mean?

– Ubi hatt
3 hours ago













Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

– JEL
20 secs ago





Thanks for the question. Without more context, any answer needs qualification. For example, "The pack horses had to be left out of town while the men went on in. Nobody was packing there." gives one context for your friend's sentence, but "In Carson City [in the 1890s] men packing a pistol were hung for being dangerous cowards. Nobody was packing there." gives quite another. Neither use would be anachronistic in a historical novel set in the 1890s.

– JEL
20 secs ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2














1898:




He passed in between his horse and that of his son's, "and got on the
west side of my son, and said to him: 'You are packing a gun for me,
and now, then, God damn you, use it' " At this, witness wheeled his
horse, and jumped off.




The Southwestern Reporter, June 27 -- August 22, 1898



Ngram finds one earlier use of "packing a gun", but it appears to refer to loading a cannon.






share|improve this answer
























  • OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago











  • @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

    – KarlG
    3 hours ago











  • @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago













  • @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago



















2














Packing meaning to carry a firearm is a shortened form of packing a gun/pistol etc., which emerges in the Western and Southwestern states and territories at least by the 1870s:




We should be glad to see William out of his troubles but he must quit “packing a pistol” and playing fighter. — Carson Daily Appeal (Carson City NV), 14 May 1873.



Q. The other men who came up, what did they come up for? —A. I didn’t see them until they got right up there.

Q. Did they have anything in their hands? —A. They were packing guns. — Modoc War, US House of Representatives, Message from the President [Grant], Washington DC, 1874.




The quotation marks around the phrase in the Nevada newspaper suggests a fairly new usage.



I suspect that the shortened form, i. e., with no direct object, is a late 20th c. innovation:




The brothers were packing, but that was not unusual; the Party was under surveillance at the time because of the fear of us starting trouble in Oakland after Dr. King's death … — Earl Anthony, Picking Up the Gun: a Report on the Black Panthers, 1970, 107.




Your friend is safe using pack a pistol etc., but it would be wise not to use the verb without a direct object for a narrative set in the late 19th c.






share|improve this answer































    1














    from Etymonline.com pack




    Sense of "to carry or convey in a pack" (1805) led to general sense of
    "to carry in any manner;" hence to pack heat "carry a gun,"




    and




    1865 Atlantic Monthly One of the best of Rosecrans's scouts..lost
    his life because he would..‘pack’ (carry) his gun.







    share|improve this answer


























    • Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

      – KarlG
      1 hour ago











    • You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

      – Sven Yargs
      36 mins ago













    • Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

      – Sven Yargs
      24 mins ago












    Your Answer








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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    1898:




    He passed in between his horse and that of his son's, "and got on the
    west side of my son, and said to him: 'You are packing a gun for me,
    and now, then, God damn you, use it' " At this, witness wheeled his
    horse, and jumped off.




    The Southwestern Reporter, June 27 -- August 22, 1898



    Ngram finds one earlier use of "packing a gun", but it appears to refer to loading a cannon.






    share|improve this answer
























    • OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago











    • @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago






    • 1





      I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

      – KarlG
      3 hours ago











    • @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago













    • @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago
















    2














    1898:




    He passed in between his horse and that of his son's, "and got on the
    west side of my son, and said to him: 'You are packing a gun for me,
    and now, then, God damn you, use it' " At this, witness wheeled his
    horse, and jumped off.




    The Southwestern Reporter, June 27 -- August 22, 1898



    Ngram finds one earlier use of "packing a gun", but it appears to refer to loading a cannon.






    share|improve this answer
























    • OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago











    • @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago






    • 1





      I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

      – KarlG
      3 hours ago











    • @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago













    • @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago














    2












    2








    2







    1898:




    He passed in between his horse and that of his son's, "and got on the
    west side of my son, and said to him: 'You are packing a gun for me,
    and now, then, God damn you, use it' " At this, witness wheeled his
    horse, and jumped off.




    The Southwestern Reporter, June 27 -- August 22, 1898



    Ngram finds one earlier use of "packing a gun", but it appears to refer to loading a cannon.






    share|improve this answer













    1898:




    He passed in between his horse and that of his son's, "and got on the
    west side of my son, and said to him: 'You are packing a gun for me,
    and now, then, God damn you, use it' " At this, witness wheeled his
    horse, and jumped off.




    The Southwestern Reporter, June 27 -- August 22, 1898



    Ngram finds one earlier use of "packing a gun", but it appears to refer to loading a cannon.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 3 hours ago









    Hot LicksHot Licks

    19.5k23777




    19.5k23777













    • OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago











    • @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago






    • 1





      I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

      – KarlG
      3 hours ago











    • @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago













    • @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago



















    • OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago











    • @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago






    • 1





      I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

      – KarlG
      3 hours ago











    • @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

      – Ubi hatt
      3 hours ago













    • @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

      – Hot Licks
      3 hours ago

















    OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago





    OP thinks that packing meaning "carrying a gun".

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago













    @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago





    @Ubihatt - And that is the sense that the above quote appears to be using.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago




    1




    1





    I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

    – KarlG
    3 hours ago





    I always thought it was just short for packing heat.

    – KarlG
    3 hours ago













    @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago







    @KarlG yep! you are correct. Packing heat means carrying a gun.

    – Ubi hatt
    3 hours ago















    @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago





    @Ubihatt - I don't understand. If you read the context (click on the link) the quote clearly refers to carrying a gun. "Packing heat" didn't enter the argot until the 1980s.

    – Hot Licks
    3 hours ago













    2














    Packing meaning to carry a firearm is a shortened form of packing a gun/pistol etc., which emerges in the Western and Southwestern states and territories at least by the 1870s:




    We should be glad to see William out of his troubles but he must quit “packing a pistol” and playing fighter. — Carson Daily Appeal (Carson City NV), 14 May 1873.



    Q. The other men who came up, what did they come up for? —A. I didn’t see them until they got right up there.

    Q. Did they have anything in their hands? —A. They were packing guns. — Modoc War, US House of Representatives, Message from the President [Grant], Washington DC, 1874.




    The quotation marks around the phrase in the Nevada newspaper suggests a fairly new usage.



    I suspect that the shortened form, i. e., with no direct object, is a late 20th c. innovation:




    The brothers were packing, but that was not unusual; the Party was under surveillance at the time because of the fear of us starting trouble in Oakland after Dr. King's death … — Earl Anthony, Picking Up the Gun: a Report on the Black Panthers, 1970, 107.




    Your friend is safe using pack a pistol etc., but it would be wise not to use the verb without a direct object for a narrative set in the late 19th c.






    share|improve this answer




























      2














      Packing meaning to carry a firearm is a shortened form of packing a gun/pistol etc., which emerges in the Western and Southwestern states and territories at least by the 1870s:




      We should be glad to see William out of his troubles but he must quit “packing a pistol” and playing fighter. — Carson Daily Appeal (Carson City NV), 14 May 1873.



      Q. The other men who came up, what did they come up for? —A. I didn’t see them until they got right up there.

      Q. Did they have anything in their hands? —A. They were packing guns. — Modoc War, US House of Representatives, Message from the President [Grant], Washington DC, 1874.




      The quotation marks around the phrase in the Nevada newspaper suggests a fairly new usage.



      I suspect that the shortened form, i. e., with no direct object, is a late 20th c. innovation:




      The brothers were packing, but that was not unusual; the Party was under surveillance at the time because of the fear of us starting trouble in Oakland after Dr. King's death … — Earl Anthony, Picking Up the Gun: a Report on the Black Panthers, 1970, 107.




      Your friend is safe using pack a pistol etc., but it would be wise not to use the verb without a direct object for a narrative set in the late 19th c.






      share|improve this answer


























        2












        2








        2







        Packing meaning to carry a firearm is a shortened form of packing a gun/pistol etc., which emerges in the Western and Southwestern states and territories at least by the 1870s:




        We should be glad to see William out of his troubles but he must quit “packing a pistol” and playing fighter. — Carson Daily Appeal (Carson City NV), 14 May 1873.



        Q. The other men who came up, what did they come up for? —A. I didn’t see them until they got right up there.

        Q. Did they have anything in their hands? —A. They were packing guns. — Modoc War, US House of Representatives, Message from the President [Grant], Washington DC, 1874.




        The quotation marks around the phrase in the Nevada newspaper suggests a fairly new usage.



        I suspect that the shortened form, i. e., with no direct object, is a late 20th c. innovation:




        The brothers were packing, but that was not unusual; the Party was under surveillance at the time because of the fear of us starting trouble in Oakland after Dr. King's death … — Earl Anthony, Picking Up the Gun: a Report on the Black Panthers, 1970, 107.




        Your friend is safe using pack a pistol etc., but it would be wise not to use the verb without a direct object for a narrative set in the late 19th c.






        share|improve this answer













        Packing meaning to carry a firearm is a shortened form of packing a gun/pistol etc., which emerges in the Western and Southwestern states and territories at least by the 1870s:




        We should be glad to see William out of his troubles but he must quit “packing a pistol” and playing fighter. — Carson Daily Appeal (Carson City NV), 14 May 1873.



        Q. The other men who came up, what did they come up for? —A. I didn’t see them until they got right up there.

        Q. Did they have anything in their hands? —A. They were packing guns. — Modoc War, US House of Representatives, Message from the President [Grant], Washington DC, 1874.




        The quotation marks around the phrase in the Nevada newspaper suggests a fairly new usage.



        I suspect that the shortened form, i. e., with no direct object, is a late 20th c. innovation:




        The brothers were packing, but that was not unusual; the Party was under surveillance at the time because of the fear of us starting trouble in Oakland after Dr. King's death … — Earl Anthony, Picking Up the Gun: a Report on the Black Panthers, 1970, 107.




        Your friend is safe using pack a pistol etc., but it would be wise not to use the verb without a direct object for a narrative set in the late 19th c.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 1 hour ago









        KarlGKarlG

        23.8k73566




        23.8k73566























            1














            from Etymonline.com pack




            Sense of "to carry or convey in a pack" (1805) led to general sense of
            "to carry in any manner;" hence to pack heat "carry a gun,"




            and




            1865 Atlantic Monthly One of the best of Rosecrans's scouts..lost
            his life because he would..‘pack’ (carry) his gun.







            share|improve this answer


























            • Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

              – KarlG
              1 hour ago











            • You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

              – Sven Yargs
              36 mins ago













            • Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

              – Sven Yargs
              24 mins ago
















            1














            from Etymonline.com pack




            Sense of "to carry or convey in a pack" (1805) led to general sense of
            "to carry in any manner;" hence to pack heat "carry a gun,"




            and




            1865 Atlantic Monthly One of the best of Rosecrans's scouts..lost
            his life because he would..‘pack’ (carry) his gun.







            share|improve this answer


























            • Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

              – KarlG
              1 hour ago











            • You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

              – Sven Yargs
              36 mins ago













            • Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

              – Sven Yargs
              24 mins ago














            1












            1








            1







            from Etymonline.com pack




            Sense of "to carry or convey in a pack" (1805) led to general sense of
            "to carry in any manner;" hence to pack heat "carry a gun,"




            and




            1865 Atlantic Monthly One of the best of Rosecrans's scouts..lost
            his life because he would..‘pack’ (carry) his gun.







            share|improve this answer















            from Etymonline.com pack




            Sense of "to carry or convey in a pack" (1805) led to general sense of
            "to carry in any manner;" hence to pack heat "carry a gun,"




            and




            1865 Atlantic Monthly One of the best of Rosecrans's scouts..lost
            his life because he would..‘pack’ (carry) his gun.








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 hours ago

























            answered 2 hours ago









            lbflbf

            22.3k22575




            22.3k22575













            • Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

              – KarlG
              1 hour ago











            • You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

              – Sven Yargs
              36 mins ago













            • Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

              – Sven Yargs
              24 mins ago



















            • Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

              – KarlG
              1 hour ago











            • You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

              – Sven Yargs
              36 mins ago













            • Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

              – Sven Yargs
              24 mins ago

















            Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

            – KarlG
            1 hour ago





            Where did you dig up the Atlantic Monthly quote? It didn’t show up in a COHA collocation search.

            – KarlG
            1 hour ago













            You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

            – Sven Yargs
            36 mins ago







            You can find the entire October 1865 Atlantic quote here. Interestingly, the context involves a "scout" from eastern Kentucky working for the U.S. army who was found out by southern troops in the Confederate army because his dialect and habits differed from those of soldiers who really were from the mountains of Alabama, as he claimed to be.

            – Sven Yargs
            36 mins ago















            Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

            – Sven Yargs
            24 mins ago





            Also of interest, from deposition taken March 19, 1869, from Andrew Hampton in Barnes vs. Adams: "Q. Did you never carry a gun, and go in company with Union soldiers ; and were you ever in the service as a soldier? — A. I have packed a gun to try to protect myself and my property, and to try to keep these men from stealing my property. I never was a soldier in any army."

            – Sven Yargs
            24 mins ago










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