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  2. Food baby! 84 deliciously adorable baby names that are good ...

    www.aol.com/food-baby-84-deliciously-adorable...

    ‘Food and drink-inspired baby names, like all dictionary-word names, are going to be immediately identified with the subject itself, so you have to be careful,” Jennifer Moss, the founder and ...

  3. 21 Best 1990s Baby Names That Are Still Relevant Today - AOL

    www.aol.com/21-best-1990s-baby-names-183900203.html

    Names like Michael, Jessica, and Emily were among the top 5 most popular names for babies born in the 1990s, according to the Social Security Administration, and they're still plenty popular today.

  4. Aloysius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloysius

    It is a Latinisation of the names Alois, Louis, Lewis, Luis, Luigi, Ludwig, and other cognates (traditionally in Medieval Latin as Ludovicus or Chlodovechus), ultimately from Frankish *Hlūdawīg, from Proto-Germanic *Hlūdawīgą ("famous battle"). In the US, the name is rare, with fewer than 0.001% of babies receiving the name since the 1940s.

  5. Aloysius (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloysius_(disambiguation)

    Aloysius is a male given name. Aloysius may also refer to: Aloysius (song), song by Scottish alternative rock band Cocteau Twins; Aloysius (teddy bear), the Lord Sebastian Flyte's teddy bear in Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited, published in 1945; Bobby Aloysius (born 1974), Indian athlete

  6. Cosmopolitodus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmopolitodus

    Cosmopolitodus is an extinct genus of mackerel shark that lived between thirty and one million years ago during the late Oligocene to the Early Pleistocene epochs.Its type species is Cosmopolitodus hastalis, the broad-tooth mako (other common names include the extinct giant mako and broad-tooth white shark).

  7. Ptychodus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptychodus

    Ptychodus was a large shark, previously estimated at 10 meters (33 feet) long based on extrapolation from teeth. [ 13 ] [ 14 ] The subadult specimen with the largest vertebra showed that it could reach lengths of 4.3–7.07 m (14.1–23.2 ft), so a 10 m (33 ft) length is possible, but more analysis is required for verification.

  8. Alopias palatasi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alopias_palatasi

    Although a thresher shark, scientists hypothesized that A. palatasi may have looked similar to the great white shark.. A. palatasi is only known from isolated teeth. They are large, measuring up to an excess of 4 centimetres (2 in) in height and suggesting a shark that grew to similar sizes or was larger than the modern great white shark, [3] which grows between 3.3–4.8 metres (11–16 ft ...

  9. Cladodont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cladodont

    This is a typical Cladodont tooth, of a shark called Glikmanius. Cladodont (from Latin cladus, meaning branch and Greek Odon, meaning tooth) is the term for a common category of early Devonian shark known primarily for its "multi-cusped" tooth consisting of one long blade surrounded by many short, fork-like tines, designed to catch food that was swallowed whole, instead of being used to saw ...