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"Set sail" or "Set sail"?
Students of different grades and classes in the mid-term invigilator gather in a mixed examination room.

In the process of invigilation, I am used to reading students' names. Various surnames, various names. Some have beautiful meanings, while others are catchy. In short, it's interesting to read students' names, which makes the boring invigilation time a little more interesting.

When I was invigilating physics, I saw a boy's name "john young set sail". What a nice name! Although "Yang" was changed to "Yang", this tampering can be forgiven, hehe.

Now four-word names are more common. There are fifty or sixty people in a class, and there will always be one or two. Some teachers jokingly call these names "fake compound surnames" and "fake real names". I think as long as the law allows, there is nothing wrong with it, just a little different.

Seeing this name, I also thought, if my surname is named like this, should it be called "the walking dead"? Dying or all kinds? God, it's so scary.

The next day, I went to another examination room to invigilate mathematics. On the back wall of the classroom, I saw the inspirational slogan "Set sail and create brilliance again", and I was puzzled. What is the difference between "setting sail" and "setting sail"? There seems to be no problem, but what's the difference? Today, I searched online:

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