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Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík

Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík (MR; official name in English: Reykjavik Junior College) is a junior college in Iceland. It is located in Reykjavík.

Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík
The main building of Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík
Address


Iceland
CoordinatesCoordinates: 64°08′46″N 21°56′12″W / 64.1460°N 21.9368°W / 64.1460; -21.9368
Information
Established1056
HeadmistressSólveig Guðrún Hannesdóttir[1]
Age rangeAround 15–19
Number of students692 (2022-2023)
Classrooms40
SongFaðir andanna
NicknameMR
RivalVerzlunarskóli Íslands
National ranking1st[2]
Nobel laureates2
Websitemr.is

The school traces its origin to 1056,[3] when a school was established in Skálholt, and it remains one of the oldest institutions in Iceland. The school was moved to Reykjavík in 1786, but poor housing conditions forced it to move again in 1805 to Bessastaðir near Reykjavík. In 1846 the school was moved to its current location, and a new building was erected for it in Reykjavík. This was the largest building in the country at the time and can be seen on the 500 Icelandic krona bill. It was used initially when Althing began to meet again in Reykjavík after a few years hiatus and thus it is in this building where Icelandic independence leader Jón Sigurðsson led the MPs in their famous phrase, Vér mótmælum allir.

The school has previously been known as Lærði skólinn (The Learned School), Latínuskólinn (The Latin School) and by the Latin title Schola Reykjavicensis; it received its present name in 1937.

Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík offers a three-year course of study. It usually ends with a degree (stúdentspróf) which gives the graduating student the right to advance to an Icelandic university.

Many Icelandic politicians, including the first prime minister Hannes Hafstein, former Prime Minister Davíð Oddsson, former President of Iceland, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson and current president, Guðni Th. Jóhannesson all attended MR. Almost every Prime Minister of Iceland has been educated at the school apart from Halldór Ásgrímsson, Ólafur Jóhannesson, Sigurður Ingi Jóhannsson, Þorsteinn Pálsson and Katrín Jakobsdóttir. Geir H. Haarde, Davíð's successor as chairman of the Independence Party and former Prime Minister, also took over from him as chairman of student body, Skólafélagið (inspector scholae). In 1879 Hannes Hafstein was the school's first inspector scholae, and in 1940 his grandson Einar Ragnarsson Kvaran achieved the position.[4] The former President of Iceland, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, was also the president of the main student body, Framtíðin.

Culture and traditions

School traditions include a hall fight and the singing of the Brevitate Vitae. Six dances are held every year, including the costume-ball and the freshman-ball. Many clubs have been founded in MR, these include: An Art club (with five divisions for: Visual art, music, dancing, literature and films), Herranótt acting guild (the oldest theatric club in northern Europe), Computer academy and a Nerd club (which merged and became known as The Academy), Traveller's club, Sport's club, Riding club, Science club, Novelist club, Chess club and the Rowing club (which was historically a club for rowing, but is now a male/female-cheerleading team).

The Hall Fight

Every year at the end of spring semester the students of MR organize a fight in the halls of the main building. A bell is placed on the ground floor of the building and the seniors aim to reach that bell and ring it while other students try to fight them and prevent them from doing so. Should the seniors succeed in their task, the younger students are to attend next class. During the fight, some or all senior students are covered in dirt. This event was cancelled permanently after the 2008-2009 Inspector Platearum (a senior student who is responsible for ringing the school bells and is furthermore the leader of the seniors in the Hall Fight) broke his neck in the fight, resulting in a 9 million ISK lawsuit.

The Freshmen Day

One day in the first weeks of school is a special day for newcomers (Icelandic: busadagur), this day is held in all junior colleges in the country and is not only the tradition of Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík, although the traditions regarding this day vary greatly between schools. The day starts with the seniors dressing up in white toga cloaks and painting their faces. The seniors then march around the school and gather the newcomers out to the school grounds where they are then thrown high into the air. The tradition of throwing newcomers into the air is old - but the part of dressing up in toga was added by seniors in 1991 (graduating in 1992). On this day (and the next few days after) students tend to sing the song "De Brevitate Vitae." The following night a freshmen ball is held.

The Violin Dance (Fiðluballið)

The violin dance is by many described as a fancy promenade ball where live violin music is played and students wear their best garments while dancing elegantly. The tradition was started in the 1960s and was meant to be an iconoclasm to the hippie culture at the time. Reverend Geir Waage is rumored to have been the originator of the dance. It was only held once, although in 1992 it was resurrected by Dagur B. Eggertsson, inspector scholae. It is now an annual event for graduating students.

Publications

The two student bodies maintain a number of periodic publications. Amongst them are:

  • Skólablaðið Skinfaxi - Articles about the past year; published annually. Contains two publications, Skólablaðið and Skinfaxi, respectably, which have been published jointly since 2009. Skinfaxi was first published in 1898 and Skólablaðið in 1925.
  • Loki Laufeyjarson - A similar publication to Menntaskólatíðindi, but published by Framtíðin, the student body.
  • Menntaskólatíðindi - A newspaper about daily life and events in the school; published roughly once every month by the new student body Skólafélagið.
  • De Rerum Natura - A scientific magazine published by the science club every year. Named after Lucretius' De Rerum Natura. It was first published in 1960, under the presidency of Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, who later became president of Iceland.
  • Yggdrasill & The Novelist News - Two magazines published by the Novelist club every year.
  • Vetur - An annual photographic newspaper with pictures of students, daily life and social life in MR.
  • Businn - A monthly newspaper for freshmen, written by juniors for juniors.
  • Idus Martii - An annual magazine about history, ancient languages and classics. Published by 2nd year students of the classical language department on the Ides of March.
  • Morkinskinna - Published annually in the beginning of autumn. A handbook containing information about the school and its students and a study diary. Named after Morkinskinna.

Debating

Framtíðin, the oldest student body in Iceland, is a member of Mælsku- og rökræðukeppni framhaldsskóla á Íslandi (MorfÍs, The Icelandic Junior College Debating Society), which holds an annual debating competition between Icelandic junior colleges. Since its foundation in 1983, MR has won the finals eight times. The students of MR regularly hold debating competitions among themselves. These competitions are held very often and a lot of traditions have evolved around them. "Framtíðin" administers the debating society for MR students and it is also one of the oldest clubs in Iceland (founded in 1883). Sólbjartur is an annual debating competition in which each class of MR is free to send one or more teams to debate. The winning team receives the title "Sólbjartur" (Literally: Sun-bright) and the best debater of the winning team receives the title "Orator Scholae" (Latin: Spokesman of the school). Another annual competition is held, called "Orator Minor" (Latin: The next-best spokesman). Orator Minor is a competition where people debate about randomly selected subjects in one-on-one battles and only have ten minutes to prepare their speeches. However, Orator Minor, from the year 2007, is held more than once every year, even up to five times.

Quizzing

MR has been the most successful school on RÚV's academic quiz show Gettu Betur; it has been champion in 22 series of the programme, with its most recent occurring in 2022. This included an 11-year winning streak from 1993 to 2003.[5] An annual quiz competition is held, for which each class sends in one or more teams to compete against others. This competition is called "Ratatoskur", named after the famous squirrel from Nordic mythology.

MR-ví

One day in October each year, the students of MR and its rival school, Verzlunarskóli Íslands (Commercial College of Iceland) or "Verzlo" as it is often referred to as, meet in the "Hljómskálagarður" park, located in downtown Reykjavík, where various games and competitions are held. These include: sprinting, soccer, rowing, giant-chess (later replaced with ordinary chess), screaming, tug-o-war, competitive eating, arm wrestling, car stuffing and the infamous Mexican-run. The night of that day, a debating competition between the two schools is held.

 
The Menntaskóli in Reykjavik.

Education

MR is renowned for its traditional and classical style of education.

MR offers two separate "paths" which students choose when enrolling in the school. These are a natural science path and a language path. The natural science path divides into a biology department and a physics department on the second year, while the language path divides into modern language department and a classical language department. MR is the only school in Iceland which teaches mandatory Latin in some form and the only one which teaches Ancient Greek.

In earlier years the school offered a six years course of study before it was shortened into four years. Thus the first year is called "third form", the second year is called "fourth form" and so on. However, in 2016 the school was shortened even more to only three years, with the first three-years graduates graduating May 2019 along with the last round of graduates in the four years system.

Housing

The number of students has grown rapidly since the founding of the school. This has led to the expanding of the school's housing. The flagship and main building of the school is still the front house, Gamli Skóli (literally: The Old School), which was built in 1846. Several houses and additions have been built since. These buildings include:

  • Íþaka (Ithaca) is the library and study hall of MR. It was built in 1867 as a gift to Icelanders from Charles Kelsall, a wealthy English merchant. It takes its name from Ithaca, New York, the home of professor Willard Fiske that started a book club at the school. The ground floor is a reading hall and an historical archive. The upper floor is the oldest library in Iceland.
  • Fjósið (The Cowshed) is a small wooden house with two classrooms. It was originally used to store fire-fighting equipment and later used to house the rector's cows.
  • Íþróttahöllin (The Sports-Palace) is the oldest sports hall in Iceland and for a long time it was the biggest one, although it is thought to be very small and outdated by today's standards. In fact it is so small that the basketball penalty boxes overlap.
  • Þrælakistan (The Sweatshop) is a very small building connected to the Sports-Palace. It is a small gym and currently contains modern weight-lifting equipment but has historically contained antiquated equipment.
  • Casa Christi (Latin: House of Christ) is an old building with several classrooms. It is relatively big compared to other houses in the area. This building was once used by the Reykjavík YMCA, thus the name "Casa Christi". It is thought to be ugly and in bad condition and has been noted by the students and faculty as smelling distinctly of chlorine. The building is due for demolition in the near future for a new and better building to be constructed. A movement within the school has surfaced, demanding a change of name for this building. One suggestion is "Casa Sophiae", (Greek: House of Wisdom), which reflects how the nation is becoming more and more secular.
  • Casa Nova (Latin: New House) is a relatively young building and the largest one in the complex. It has many classrooms and is also the center for the students' social gatherings. A comfort lounge and a cafeteria is located in the basement of the building. It was originally built in the 1960s but underwent major restoration in 2006.
  • Villa Nova (Latin: New Apartment) is the groundskeeper's shed and a storage room for the school. It also used to house the offices of the student bodies before Amtmannsstígur 2 was taken into service.
  • Elísabetarhús (Elizabeth's House) also known as "Minni Elísabetar" (Memoirs of Elizabeth) is the latest addition to the school's housing. It has several classrooms, including some of the most perfect educational laboratories in Iceland. Known as Casa Subuculae before it was fully taken into service. It was a gift from the former owner of the house, whose wife, Elísabet, had recently died.
  • Amtmannsstígur 2 is the teachers' lounge. It also houses offices and serves as a meeting place for the student bodies.
  • Menntaskólaselið or simply selið, built 1938, is a house little outside of Reykjavík (around 45 minutes), close to the southern town of Hveragerði. It is a rural dwelling used for student trips and vacations. It was used for the first time in ten years in 2011 after having been closed due to its bad state. Since then it has been used extensively by the school's choir, and a geology trip for the freshmen once per year.

Rectors from 1846

1846-1851: Sveinbjörn Egilsson
1851-1867: Bjarni Jónsson
1867-1872: Jens Sigurðsson
1872-1895: Jón Þorkelsson
1895-1904: Björn M. Ólsen
1904-1913: Steingrímur Thorsteinsson
1913-1928: Geir Zoëga
1928-1929: Þorleifur H. Bjarnason
1929-1956: Pálmi Hannesson
1956-1965: Kristinn Ármannsson
1965-1970: Einar Magnússon
1970-1996: Guðni Guðmundsson
1996-2001: Ragnheiður Torfadóttir
2001-2012: Yngvi Pétursson
2012-2013: Linda Rós Michaelsdóttir
2013-2017: Yngvi Pétursson
2017-2022: Elísabet Siemsen
2022-present: Sólveig Guðrún Hannesdóttir

References

  1. ^ Administrator. "Starfsfólk 2017-2018". www.mr.is.
  2. ^ "MR og MH í efstu sætum".
  3. ^ "Menntaskólinn í Reykjavík 150 ára". www.mbl.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  4. ^ "Inspector scholae". www.mr.is.
  5. ^ "MR vann Gettu betur". RÚV. 13 March 2020. Retrieved 30 May 2020.

External links

  • Official website
  • Student body website
  • The other student body website

menntaskólinn, reykjavík, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, d. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik MR official name in English Reykjavik Junior College is a junior college in Iceland It is located in Reykjavik Menntaskolinn i ReykjavikThe main building of Menntaskolinn i ReykjavikAddressLaekjargata 7ReykjavikIcelandCoordinatesCoordinates 64 08 46 N 21 56 12 W 64 1460 N 21 9368 W 64 1460 21 9368InformationEstablished1056HeadmistressSolveig Gudrun Hannesdottir 1 Age rangeAround 15 19Number of students692 2022 2023 Classrooms40SongFadir andannaNicknameMRRivalVerzlunarskoli IslandsNational ranking1st 2 Nobel laureates2Websitemr wbr isThe school traces its origin to 1056 3 when a school was established in Skalholt and it remains one of the oldest institutions in Iceland The school was moved to Reykjavik in 1786 but poor housing conditions forced it to move again in 1805 to Bessastadir near Reykjavik In 1846 the school was moved to its current location and a new building was erected for it in Reykjavik This was the largest building in the country at the time and can be seen on the 500 Icelandic krona bill It was used initially when Althing began to meet again in Reykjavik after a few years hiatus and thus it is in this building where Icelandic independence leader Jon Sigurdsson led the MPs in their famous phrase Ver motmaelum allir The school has previously been known as Laerdi skolinn The Learned School Latinuskolinn The Latin School and by the Latin title Schola Reykjavicensis it received its present name in 1937 Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik offers a three year course of study It usually ends with a degree studentsprof which gives the graduating student the right to advance to an Icelandic university Many Icelandic politicians including the first prime minister Hannes Hafstein former Prime Minister David Oddsson former President of Iceland olafur Ragnar Grimsson and current president Gudni Th Johannesson all attended MR Almost every Prime Minister of Iceland has been educated at the school apart from Halldor Asgrimsson olafur Johannesson Sigurdur Ingi Johannsson THorsteinn Palsson and Katrin Jakobsdottir Geir H Haarde David s successor as chairman of the Independence Party and former Prime Minister also took over from him as chairman of student body Skolafelagid inspector scholae In 1879 Hannes Hafstein was the school s first inspector scholae and in 1940 his grandson Einar Ragnarsson Kvaran achieved the position 4 The former President of Iceland olafur Ragnar Grimsson was also the president of the main student body Framtidin Contents 1 Culture and traditions 1 1 The Hall Fight 1 2 The Freshmen Day 1 3 The Violin Dance Fidluballid 1 4 Publications 1 5 Debating 1 6 Quizzing 1 7 MR vi 2 Education 3 Housing 4 Rectors from 1846 5 References 6 External linksCulture and traditions EditSchool traditions include a hall fight and the singing of the Brevitate Vitae Six dances are held every year including the costume ball and the freshman ball Many clubs have been founded in MR these include An Art club with five divisions for Visual art music dancing literature and films Herranott acting guild the oldest theatric club in northern Europe Computer academy and a Nerd club which merged and became known as The Academy Traveller s club Sport s club Riding club Science club Novelist club Chess club and the Rowing club which was historically a club for rowing but is now a male female cheerleading team The Hall Fight Edit Every year at the end of spring semester the students of MR organize a fight in the halls of the main building A bell is placed on the ground floor of the building and the seniors aim to reach that bell and ring it while other students try to fight them and prevent them from doing so Should the seniors succeed in their task the younger students are to attend next class During the fight some or all senior students are covered in dirt This event was cancelled permanently after the 2008 2009 Inspector Platearum a senior student who is responsible for ringing the school bells and is furthermore the leader of the seniors in the Hall Fight broke his neck in the fight resulting in a 9 million ISK lawsuit The Freshmen Day Edit One day in the first weeks of school is a special day for newcomers Icelandic busadagur this day is held in all junior colleges in the country and is not only the tradition of Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik although the traditions regarding this day vary greatly between schools The day starts with the seniors dressing up in white toga cloaks and painting their faces The seniors then march around the school and gather the newcomers out to the school grounds where they are then thrown high into the air The tradition of throwing newcomers into the air is old but the part of dressing up in toga was added by seniors in 1991 graduating in 1992 On this day and the next few days after students tend to sing the song De Brevitate Vitae The following night a freshmen ball is held The Violin Dance Fidluballid Edit The violin dance is by many described as a fancy promenade ball where live violin music is played and students wear their best garments while dancing elegantly The tradition was started in the 1960s and was meant to be an iconoclasm to the hippie culture at the time Reverend Geir Waage is rumored to have been the originator of the dance It was only held once although in 1992 it was resurrected by Dagur B Eggertsson inspector scholae It is now an annual event for graduating students Publications Edit The two student bodies maintain a number of periodic publications Amongst them are Skolabladid Skinfaxi Articles about the past year published annually Contains two publications Skolabladid and Skinfaxi respectably which have been published jointly since 2009 Skinfaxi was first published in 1898 and Skolabladid in 1925 Loki Laufeyjarson A similar publication to Menntaskolatidindi but published by Framtidin the student body Menntaskolatidindi A newspaper about daily life and events in the school published roughly once every month by the new student body Skolafelagid De Rerum Natura A scientific magazine published by the science club every year Named after Lucretius De Rerum Natura It was first published in 1960 under the presidency of olafur Ragnar Grimsson who later became president of Iceland Yggdrasill amp The Novelist News Two magazines published by the Novelist club every year Vetur An annual photographic newspaper with pictures of students daily life and social life in MR Businn A monthly newspaper for freshmen written by juniors for juniors Idus Martii An annual magazine about history ancient languages and classics Published by 2nd year students of the classical language department on the Ides of March Morkinskinna Published annually in the beginning of autumn A handbook containing information about the school and its students and a study diary Named after Morkinskinna Debating Edit Framtidin the oldest student body in Iceland is a member of Maelsku og rokraedukeppni framhaldsskola a Islandi MorfIs The Icelandic Junior College Debating Society which holds an annual debating competition between Icelandic junior colleges Since its foundation in 1983 MR has won the finals eight times The students of MR regularly hold debating competitions among themselves These competitions are held very often and a lot of traditions have evolved around them Framtidin administers the debating society for MR students and it is also one of the oldest clubs in Iceland founded in 1883 Solbjartur is an annual debating competition in which each class of MR is free to send one or more teams to debate The winning team receives the title Solbjartur Literally Sun bright and the best debater of the winning team receives the title Orator Scholae Latin Spokesman of the school Another annual competition is held called Orator Minor Latin The next best spokesman Orator Minor is a competition where people debate about randomly selected subjects in one on one battles and only have ten minutes to prepare their speeches However Orator Minor from the year 2007 is held more than once every year even up to five times Quizzing Edit MR has been the most successful school on RUV s academic quiz show Gettu Betur it has been champion in 22 series of the programme with its most recent occurring in 2022 This included an 11 year winning streak from 1993 to 2003 5 An annual quiz competition is held for which each class sends in one or more teams to compete against others This competition is called Ratatoskur named after the famous squirrel from Nordic mythology MR vi Edit One day in October each year the students of MR and its rival school Verzlunarskoli Islands Commercial College of Iceland or Verzlo as it is often referred to as meet in the Hljomskalagardur park located in downtown Reykjavik where various games and competitions are held These include sprinting soccer rowing giant chess later replaced with ordinary chess screaming tug o war competitive eating arm wrestling car stuffing and the infamous Mexican run The night of that day a debating competition between the two schools is held The Menntaskoli in Reykjavik Education EditMR is renowned for its traditional and classical style of education MR offers two separate paths which students choose when enrolling in the school These are a natural science path and a language path The natural science path divides into a biology department and a physics department on the second year while the language path divides into modern language department and a classical language department MR is the only school in Iceland which teaches mandatory Latin in some form and the only one which teaches Ancient Greek In earlier years the school offered a six years course of study before it was shortened into four years Thus the first year is called third form the second year is called fourth form and so on However in 2016 the school was shortened even more to only three years with the first three years graduates graduating May 2019 along with the last round of graduates in the four years system Housing EditThe number of students has grown rapidly since the founding of the school This has led to the expanding of the school s housing The flagship and main building of the school is still the front house Gamli Skoli literally The Old School which was built in 1846 Several houses and additions have been built since These buildings include Ithaka Ithaca is the library and study hall of MR It was built in 1867 as a gift to Icelanders from Charles Kelsall a wealthy English merchant It takes its name from Ithaca New York the home of professor Willard Fiske that started a book club at the school The ground floor is a reading hall and an historical archive The upper floor is the oldest library in Iceland Fjosid The Cowshed is a small wooden house with two classrooms It was originally used to store fire fighting equipment and later used to house the rector s cows Ithrottahollin The Sports Palace is the oldest sports hall in Iceland and for a long time it was the biggest one although it is thought to be very small and outdated by today s standards In fact it is so small that the basketball penalty boxes overlap THraelakistan The Sweatshop is a very small building connected to the Sports Palace It is a small gym and currently contains modern weight lifting equipment but has historically contained antiquated equipment Casa Christi Latin House of Christ is an old building with several classrooms It is relatively big compared to other houses in the area This building was once used by the Reykjavik YMCA thus the name Casa Christi It is thought to be ugly and in bad condition and has been noted by the students and faculty as smelling distinctly of chlorine The building is due for demolition in the near future for a new and better building to be constructed A movement within the school has surfaced demanding a change of name for this building One suggestion is Casa Sophiae Greek House of Wisdom which reflects how the nation is becoming more and more secular Casa Nova Latin New House is a relatively young building and the largest one in the complex It has many classrooms and is also the center for the students social gatherings A comfort lounge and a cafeteria is located in the basement of the building It was originally built in the 1960s but underwent major restoration in 2006 Villa Nova Latin New Apartment is the groundskeeper s shed and a storage room for the school It also used to house the offices of the student bodies before Amtmannsstigur 2 was taken into service Elisabetarhus Elizabeth s House also known as Minni Elisabetar Memoirs of Elizabeth is the latest addition to the school s housing It has several classrooms including some of the most perfect educational laboratories in Iceland Known as Casa Subuculae before it was fully taken into service It was a gift from the former owner of the house whose wife Elisabet had recently died Amtmannsstigur 2 is the teachers lounge It also houses offices and serves as a meeting place for the student bodies Menntaskolaselid or simply selid built 1938 is a house little outside of Reykjavik around 45 minutes close to the southern town of Hveragerdi It is a rural dwelling used for student trips and vacations It was used for the first time in ten years in 2011 after having been closed due to its bad state Since then it has been used extensively by the school s choir and a geology trip for the freshmen once per year Rectors from 1846 Edit1846 1851 Sveinbjorn Egilsson 1851 1867 Bjarni Jonsson 1867 1872 Jens Sigurdsson 1872 1895 Jon THorkelsson 1895 1904 Bjorn M olsen 1904 1913 Steingrimur Thorsteinsson 1913 1928 Geir Zoega 1928 1929 THorleifur H Bjarnason 1929 1956 Palmi Hannesson 1956 1965 Kristinn Armannsson 1965 1970 Einar Magnusson 1970 1996 Gudni Gudmundsson 1996 2001 Ragnheidur Torfadottir 2001 2012 Yngvi Petursson 2012 2013 Linda Ros Michaelsdottir 2013 2017 Yngvi Petursson 2017 2022 Elisabet Siemsen 2022 present Solveig Gudrun Hannesdottir References Edit Administrator Starfsfolk 2017 2018 www mr is MR og MH i efstu saetum Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik 150 ara www mbl is in Icelandic Retrieved 2021 04 25 Inspector scholae www mr is MR vann Gettu betur RUV 13 March 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 External links Edit Official website Student body website The other student body website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Menntaskolinn i Reykjavik amp oldid 1117554555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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