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Genus of fishes
Africa. The recognized species in this genus are: Cotylopus acutipinnis Guichenot, 1863 Cotylopus rubripinnis Keith, Hoareau & P. Bosc, 2005 Froese,
Cotylopus
Group of islands in the Indian Ocean
Hypseleotris cyprinoides, Cotylopus acutipinnis, Glossogobius kokius, Gobius commersonii, and Oxyurichthys guibei. Cotylopus acutipinnis, which is endemic
Mascarene_Islands
Subfamily of fishes
included under Sicydiinae are: Akihito Watson, Keith, and Marquet, 2007 Cotylopus Guichenot, 1863 Lentipes Günther, 1861 Parasicydium Risch, 1980 Sicyopterus
Sicydiinae
Onespot goby (Coryogalops monospilus) Kuna goby (Coryphopterus kuna) Cotylopus acutipinnis Cryptocentrus leonis Ben-Tuvia's goby (Didogobius bentuvii)
List_of_data_deficient_fishes
COTYLOPUS
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Girl/Female
Indian
Adoration
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : possibly a variant of Chuck.Possibly an altered spelling of the Austrian (Tyrolean) surname Tschugg, from Romansh tschugg ‘mountain ridge’ (from Latin iugum ‘yoke’), hence a topographic name for someone who lived near a ridge or pass.
Girl/Female
Indian
Speech, Powerful, Heaven and earth
Boy/Male
Indian
A person who laughs most na
Girl/Female
Hindu
Wife of bharat in ramayana (Bharat's wife & King Janak's daughter)
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
Mother
Girl/Female
Tamil
Mythily | à®®à¯à®¯à¯à®¤à®¿à®²à¯€
Goddess Sita
Girl/Female
Indian
King of the forest
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived near a place used for archery practice, from Middle English butte ‘mark for archery’, ‘target’, ‘goal’. In the Middle Ages archery practice was a feudal obligation, and every settlement had its practice area.English : topographic name from Middle English butte ‘strip of land abutting on a boundary’, ‘short strip or ridge at right angles to other strips in a common field’.English : from Middle English butte, bott ‘butt’, ‘cask’, applied as a metonymic occupational name for a cooper or as a nickname possibly for a heavy drinker or for a large, fat man.English : from a Middle English personal name, But(t), of unknown origin, perhaps originally a nickname meaning ‘short and stumpy’, and akin to late Middle English butt ‘thick end’, ‘stump’, ‘buttock’ (of Germanic origin).German and English : in both Middle Low German and Middle English the word but(te) denoted various types of marine fish, originally a fish with a blunt head, for example halibut (German Heilbutt) or turbot (German Steinbutt), and the surname may in some cases be a metonymic occupational name for a seller of fish or salt fish.Kashmiri : variant of Bhatt.Robert Butt came from Kent, England, to NC in 1640.
Boy/Male
Indian
Price, Worth
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