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What's this queenside fianchetto option of the Queens Gambit called?

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Is there a way you can add body to your answer? Not to be rude, but without any explanations or opening advice I can only regard this as an empty response.
In the queen's gambit, white plays 2.c4 (or c4 pressuring black's d4 point at a slightly later move). This is definitely not that.
1.d4 d5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Bg5 is the Veresov and it sort of looks like that, but then putting the other knight on f3 isn't what I would play -- white's got to put pawn pressure on black's center somehow, if he blocks his c-pawn then it has to come by way of the e-pawn, and Nf3 doesn't help with forcing e2-e4.

Informative. I'm playing as black, I accidentally invert the colours sometimes though. What is this called by 9...c5?

I'm more familiar with the Sicilian Defence , and I noticed that it looks similar to a queenside Dragon Variation (I couldn't recognise the proper name for it). I know I'm a solid defensive player that recognises positional play, but I'm not well versed in opening titles. I'm still trying to figure out black's opening and tranposed style.
***I've made adjustments to this, mistakenly thought there was a Sicilian tranposition***
I want to find researchable opening transpositions of this midgame variation of the Queen's Gambit, I find I'm a fairly hyper-modern Sicilian Defense player due to exchanges and knight handling (correct me if I'm wrong).
I can't recognise any established names for it though, so is it possible I've stumbled to a coinable chess theory? If so, I'd like to nickname it (until I learn the true name of this midgame tranposition) the Queen's Gambit, Dragon variation. LOL