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American punk band (1991-2002)
Ghoti Hook (/ˈɡoʊti ˌhʊk/ GOH-tee huuk) is an American punk band from Fairfax, Virginia. The band formed in 1991, signed to Tooth & Nail Records in 1996
Ghoti_Hook
Creative re-spelling of the word "fish"
uses "Ghoti Oeufs" as the name for his caviar business, and Batman explains the reference to Robin. Ghoti Hook is a 1990s Christian punk band. Ghoti has
Ghoti
Topics referred to by the same term
Nashik district in Maharashtra state, India Ghoti Khurd, a small village in Maharashtra state, India Ghoti Hook, a former Christian punk band from Fairfax
Ghoti_(disambiguation)
1998 studio album by Ghoti Hook
Songs We Didn't Write is Ghoti Hook's third CD on Tooth & Nail Records. A cover album, it contains Ghoti Hook versions of songs both from secular and Christian
Songs_We_Didn't_Write
1997 studio album by Ghoti Hook
Banana Man is Ghoti Hook's second CD on Tooth and Nail Records. It continues the band's trademark sound started with Sumo Surprise, combining Christianity
Banana_Man_(album)
American music festival
Brother's Keeper Converge (headliners) Elliott Few Left Standing Glasseater Ghoti Hook Hopesfall Junction 18 New Found Glory Point of Recognition Reach the Sky
Furnace_Fest
Wayne Four Year Strong The Friday Night Boys Generation X The Get Up Kids Ghoti Hook Go Betty Go Go Radio Gob Goldfinger Good Charlotte Goodnight Nurse Grayscale
List_of_pop-punk_bands
Everyday Sunday False Idle Fighting Jacks FM Static The Fold Forever Changed Ghoti Hook Halo Friendlies Hangnail Hawk Nelson (early) House of Heroes The Huntingtons
List_of_Christian_punk_bands
American Christian rock record label
Point Focused The Fold For Love Not Lisa Frodus Further Seems Forever Ghoti Hook Aaron Gillespie Halo Friendlies Hangnail Havalina Hawk Nelson Hearts Like
Tooth_&_Nail_Records
1996 studio album by Ghoti Hook
Sumo Surprise is the debut studio album by the American punk band Ghoti Hook, released on Tooth and Nail Records. The album is a pop punk CD, with a tendency
Sumo_Surprise
Canadian-American musician (born 1980)
influences have been in the pop punk genre, specifically NOFX, Less Than Jake, Ghoti Hook, MxPx, and Goldfinger. He later introduced influences from Simon & Garfunkel
Matt_Thiessen
American alternative rock band
group has cited early influences from Blink-182, NOFX, Less Than Jake, Ghoti Hook and MxPx. Lyrical influences include Tom Petty, Paul Simon and John Mayer
Relient_K
Further Seems Forever – (rock, emo, indie rock) (1998–2006, 2010–present) Ghoti Hook – (pop punk) (1990–2002, 2009) Glowin' Moses – (pop rock, rock) (1999–2008)
List_of_Christian_rock_bands
Christian ska and punk band
several prominent Christian alternative bands and record labels, including Ghoti Hook, Crashdog and Alex Parker of Flying Tart Records. The band has since partially
Five_Iron_Frenzy
Album T&N Bloodshed The Soft Spoken Words of Fallbrook 1996-08-30 EP T&N Ghoti Hook Sumo Surprise 1996-08-30 Album T&N Various Tooth & Nail Sampler, Vol.
Tooth & Nail Records discography
Tooth_&_Nail_Records_discography
American ska band
respectively. In the fall of 1997 the Supertones headlined a tour with Ghoti Hook and Stavesacre, and the next spring opened for Audio Adrenaline, with
The_O.C._Supertones
Genre of punk rock
the 1990s, the underground Christian punk scene grew as bands such as Ghoti Hook, Squad Five-O, the Huntingtons, Slick Shoes, Dogwood, Pocket Change, Officer
Christian_punk
2000 studio album by AP2
Out Mark Salomon of Stavesacre and The Crucified Joel Timothy Bell of Ghoti Hook Sage J.M. Zaletel of Klank Cummings, Tony (June 1, 2000). "AP2 - Suspension
Suspension of Disbelief (album)
Suspension_of_Disbelief_(album)
List of music acts composed of members with already established careers outside of them
(The Crucified, CHATTERBoX, Stavesacre, Neon Horse) Joel Timothy Bell (Ghoti Hook) Sage J.M. Zaletel (Klank) Successor to the Argyle Park project. Albums:
List_of_musical_supergroups
American industrial rock band
did Mark Salomon, and Joel Timothy Bell of the Tooth & Nail punk band Ghoti Hook also provided some vocals. The music on Suspension of Disbelief was just
Argyle_Park
Topics referred to by the same term
Bananaman (comedy duo), a Japanese comedy duo Banana Man (album) (1997), by Ghoti Hook Bananamen, side-project of London group The Sting-rays "Banana Man", a
Banana_Man
Today Bands formed AFI Chixdiggit Electric Frankenstein Face to Face Ghoti Hook Glü Gun Hi-Standard Horace Pinker I Spy J Church Mustard Plug No Fun At
Timeline_of_punk_rock
England, UK 2004–2011, 2012 A hardcore punk/garage punk/post-hardcore band. Ghoti Hook Fairfax Virginia, USA 1990–2002, 2009, 2022–present A Christian Punk/pop
List_of_punk_rock_bands,_0–K
1999 US music awards ceremony
Water; Between Thieves; Steve Hindalong; Tattoo Records, Benson Bananaman; Ghoti Hook; Kevin 131; Tooth & Nail Records Brightblur; Massivivid; Wally Shaw, Mark
30th_GMA_Dove_Awards
Brother Crashdog Dogwood (California band) Everyday Sunday Flatfoot 56 Ghoti Hook Glen Meadmore Halo Friendlies Hawk Nelson Headnoise Jesse & The Rockers
List of Christian media organizations
List_of_Christian_media_organizations
Building
LANY Dawes Less Than Jake Neon Trees The Ting Tings Hoodie Allen Watsky Ghoti Hook Millencolin Gogol Bordello Value Pac Powers, Stephanie (February 15, 2021)
State Theatre (St. Petersburg, Florida)
State_Theatre_(St._Petersburg,_Florida)
Punk band from Chicago, U.S.
and Chris and Trevor Wiitala. They did an extensive national tour with Ghoti Hook and the Smiley Kids. Following this tour The Blamed and Left Out merged
Left_Out
Topics referred to by the same term
2011 A Retrospective: 1995–2000, by Son Volt Retrospective, an album by Ghoti Hook Retrospective, 1990 by Poco A Retrospective, a 1977 album by Linda Ronstadt
Retrospective (disambiguation)
Retrospective_(disambiguation)
Musical artist
The band toured with many bands including Switchfoot, Five Iron Frenzy, Ghoti Hook, The Blamed, and many others (see 5 Minute Walk). In 2002, a couple years
George_Fraska
Topics referred to by the same term
Run", a song by Dark Tranquillity from Character "Dry Run", a song by Ghoti Hook from Sumo Surprise Arroyo (creek), an intermittently dry creek Dry Creek
Dry_run
American indie band
as an opening act for other artists, including the 77s, the Choir and Ghoti Hook. All the Flowers Growing in Your Mother’s Eyes (1990) – R.E.X Fall on
The_Throes_(band)
Rock band
the band's first tour with Tooth and Nail, was with The Dingees and Ghoti Hook. ...And We Drive, 2003 (Tooth & Nail Records) Give Back, 2002 (Tooth &
Side_Walk_Slam
Abugida used to write Bengali
downstroke to the right of the preceding consonant as opposed to a downward hook below: রূ ru, গ্রূ gru, থ্রূ thru, দ্রূ dru, ধ্রূ dhru, ভ্রূ bhru, শ্রূ śru
Bengali_alphabet
Dhibi on the south bank of Ajay River, where spiral bangles, rings and fish-hook have been found. In the West Bengal, Black and red ware (BRW) is a Copper
History_of_West_Bengal
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
Surname or Lastname
English
English : possibly a variant of Hackwood, a habitational name from a minor place so named. One example, in Northamptonshire, is named from Middle English hacked ‘cut’ + wode ‘wood’; another, in Basingstoke, Hampshire is named from Old English haca ‘hook’, ‘bend’ + wudu ‘wood’. In the U.S. this name is frequent in NC.See Hagewood 1.
Surname or Lastname
French
French : from the Old French word goi (Latin gubia) denoting a type of bill hook or knife used by vine-growers or coopers, hence possibly a metonymic occupational name for a maker or user of such implements.English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from any of various places in France named Gouy, for example in Aisne or Pas-de-Calais.Galician : probably a habitational name from Goy in Lugo province, Galicia.German : northwestern variant of Gau.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim, Pashtun
Bud
Surname or Lastname
English (East Anglia)
English (East Anglia) : perhaps a habitational name from a house bearing the sign of a bunch of grapes. The vocabulary word is attested from the 13th century (at first in the compound wingrape), and comes from Old French grape, which is probably related to a Germanic element meaning ‘hook’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Hook.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian, Sindhi
Name of a River
Surname or Lastname
English and North German
English and North German : from a personal name or nickname meaning ‘stag’, Middle English hert, Middle Low German hërte, harte.German : variant spelling of Hardt 1 and 2.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : ornamental name or a nickname from German and Yiddish hart ‘hard’.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hAirt ‘descendant of Art’, a byname meaning ‘bear’, ‘hero’. The English name became established in Ireland in the 17th century.French : from an Old French word meaning ‘rope’, hence possibly a metonymic occupational name for a rope maker or a hangman.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch hart, hert ‘hard’, ‘strong’, ‘ruthless’, ‘unruly’.This name was brought independently to New England by many bearers from the 17th century onward. Stephen Hart was one of the founders of Hartford, CT, (coming from Cambridge, MA, with Thomas Hooker) in 1635.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English hap(pe) ‘chance’, ‘luck’, ‘fortune’ (from Old Norse happ), applied as a nickname for someone considered fortunate or well favored. Compare Chance, Fortune.German, Dutch, and northern French (Picardy) : from Middle Low German, Middle Dutch, Old French happe ‘hook’, ‘hatchet’, ‘pruning hook’, a metonymic occupational name for a maker of such implements or for someone who used one in his work. Compare Heppe.German : from a reduced form of the medieval German personal names Hadebald or Hadebert (see Happel).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Devon called Huxford (preserved in the name of Huxford Farm), from the Old English personal name HÅcc or the Old English word hÅc ‘hook or angle of land’ + ford ‘ford’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Hook, either in the topographic sense or a patronymic from the nickname. This surname is also established in northern Ireland.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places in Lancashire and Northumberland. The former is named from Old English hÅh ‘spur of a hill’ or hÅc ‘hook’ + wÄ«c ‘outlying farm’; the latter probably originally had as its first element Old English hÄ“ah ‘high’, but was later influenced by hÅh.
Girl/Female
Muslim
Bud
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Devon)
English (mainly Devon) : habitational name from a farm in North Devon on a spur of Exmoor, named with the Old English personal name HÅc or Old English hÅc ‘hook or spur of land’ + stapol ‘post’.
Surname or Lastname
English (Lancashire)
English (Lancashire) : habitational name from Hacking in Lancashire, the name of which is of uncertain origin. Early forms appear with the definite article, and the name may represent an Old English term for a fish weir, a derivative of hæcc ‘hatch’, ‘low gate’, or haca ‘hook’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English personal name Merewine (Old English Maerwin, from mær ‘fame’ + win ‘friend’).English : from the Old English personal name Merefinn, derived from Old Norse Mora-Finnr.English : from the Old English personal name Mǣrwynn, composed of the elements mǣr ‘famous’, ‘renowned’ + wynn ‘joy’.English : from the Welsh personal name Merfyn, Mervyn, composed of the Old Welsh elements mer, which probably means ‘marrow’, + myn ‘eminent’.English : Mathew Marvin was one of the founders of Hartford, CT, (coming from Cambridge, MA, with Thomas Hooker) in 1635.
Surname or Lastname
English (but most common in Wales)
English (but most common in Wales) : from Lowis, Lodovicus, a Norman personal name composed of the Germanic elements hlod ‘fame’ + wīg ‘war’. This was the name of the founder of the Frankish dynasty, recorded in Latin chronicles as Ludovicus and Chlodovechus (the latter form becoming Old French Clovis, Clouis, Louis, the former developing into German Ludwig). The name was popular throughout France in the Middle Ages and was introduced to England by the Normans. In Wales it became inextricably confused with 2.Welsh : from an Anglicized form of the personal name Llywelyn (see Llewellyn).Irish and Scottish : reduced Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Lughaidh ‘son of Lughaidh’. This is one of the most common Old Irish personal names. It is derived from Lugh ‘brightness’, which was the name of a Celtic god.Americanized form of any of various like-sounding Jewish surnames.This name was brought independently to New England by many bearers from the 17th century onward. William Lewis was one of the founders of Hartford, CT, (coming from Cambridge, MA, with Thomas Hooker) in 1635.
Surname or Lastname
English (southern)
English (southern) : from Middle English hoke, Old English hÅc ‘hook’, in any of a variety of senses: as a metonymic occupational name for someone who made and sold hooks as agricultural implements or employed them in his work; as a topographic name for someone who lived by a ‘hook’ of land, i.e. the bend of a river or the spur of a hill; or as a nickname (in part a survival of an Old English byname) for someone with a hunched back or a hooked nose. A similar ambiguity of interpretation presents itself in the case of Crook. In some cases the surname may be habitational from any of various places named Hook(e), from this word, as for example in Devon, Dorset, Hampshire, Surrey, Wiltshire, and Worcestershire.Swedish (Hö(ö)k) : nickname or a metonymic occupational name from hök ‘hawk’, a soldier’s name.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from North or South Kelsey in Lincolnshire, so named from Cēol, an Old English personal name, or alternatively from an unattested Old Scandinavian word, kæl ‘wedge-shaped piece of land’, + ēg ‘island’, ‘area of dry land in a marsh’.Possibly also an Americanized form of German Gelzer.William Kelsey was one of the founders of Hartford, CT, (coming from Cambridge, MA, with Thomas Hooker) in 1635.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Old Norse byname Haki (cognate with Hook), given originally to someone with a hunched figure or a hooked nose.North German : variant of Haack.Dutch and North German : from the Germanic personal name Hac(c)o, a short form of a compound name beginning with the element hag ‘hedge’, ‘enclosure’.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant spelling of Hacke.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly southeastern)
English (mainly southeastern) : variant of Hook (in the occupational or topographic and habitational senses), with the addition of the agent suffix -er.Congregational clergyman Thomas Hooker (1586?–1647) sailed from England with John Cotton and Samuel Stone and arrived in Boston in 1633. He led the 1635 migration of most of his congregation to Hartford in the Connecticut Valley. Thomas is the earliest known entrant, but the name Hooker is common and was also introduced independently by others during the 17th and 18th centuries.
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Muslim
Love
Girl/Female
Indian, Telugu
Goddess Laksmi
Boy/Male
Indian
Full of qualities, Expansionist, Vast, Spacious, Man of qualities
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian
Friend
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Protected of the Beneficent
Boy/Male
Indian, Kannada, Tamil
Happy
Girl/Female
Christian & English(British/American/Australian)
Jewel
Boy/Male
Latin
God of the harvest.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu
Leafy
Girl/Female
Tamil
Divine, Rose
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
GHOTI HOOK
a.
Having a hooked or aquiline nose.
n.
One of the terminal hooks on the foot of an insect.
v. i.
To bend; to curve as a hook.
v. t.
To catch or fasten with a hook or hooks; to seize, capture, or hold, as with a hook, esp. with a disguised or baited hook; hence, to secure by allurement or artifice; to entrap; to catch; as, to hook a dress; to hook a trout.
a.
Full of hooks; pertaining to hooks.
n.
The projecting points of the thigh bones of cattle; -- called also hook bones.
n.
One who, or that which, hooks.
imp. & p. p.
of Hook
n.
A little hook.
n.
The state of being bent like a hook; incurvation.
a.
Provided with a hook or hooks.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Hook
n.
A piece of metal, or other hard material, formed or bent into a curve or at an angle, for catching, holding, or sustaining anything; as, a hook for catching fish; a hook for fastening a gate; a boat hook, etc.
v. t.
To loose from a hook; to undo or open by loosening or unfastening the hooks of; as, to unhook a fish; to unhook a dress.
n.
See Eccentric, and V-hook.
a.
Having the form of a hook; curvated; as, the hooked bill of a bird.