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Gazetteer
Tuttle, ND -- U.S. city in North Dakota
Population (2000): 106
Housing Units (2000): 79
Land area (2000): 0.247007 sq. miles (0.639746 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.247007 sq. miles (0.639746 sq. km)
FIPS code: 80140
Located within: North Dakota (ND), FIPS 38
Location: 47.144020 N, 99.995464 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 58488
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Tuttle, ND
Tuttle
Tuttle, OK -- U.S. city in Oklahoma
Population (2000): 4294
Housing Units (2000): 1648
Land area (2000): 29.155823 sq. miles (75.513232 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 29.155823 sq. miles (75.513232 sq. km)
FIPS code: 75450
Located within: Oklahoma (OK), FIPS 40
Location: 35.294963 N, 97.785683 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 73089
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Tuttle, OK
Tuttle
Wikipedia
Tuttle

Tuttle may refer to:

Tuttle (M*A*S*H)

"Tuttle" is an episode from the television series M*A*S*H. It was the 15th episode broadcast and aired on January 14, 1973. It was written by Bruce Shelly and David Ketchum and directed by William Wiard. Due to its bizarre storyline, it is one of the best-known episodes of the show. This episode was nominated for a Writers Guild Award.

Guest cast is Dennis Fimple as Sergeant "Sparky" Pryor, Mary-Robin Redd as Sister Theresa, Herb Voland as Brigadier General Crandell Clayton, and James Sikking as a finance officer.

Tuttle (surname)

Tuttle is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • A. Theodore Tuttle (1919–1986), Mormon leader
  • Ashley Tuttle, musical actress and dancer
  • Bill Tuttle (1929–1998), baseball player and public speaker
  • Charles E. Tuttle (1915–1993), publisher
  • Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, bishop of the Episcopal Church
  • Dave Tuttle (born 1972), UK football manager
  • Denver Tuttle (born 1957), artist, sculpture
  • Elbert Tuttle (1897–1996), US judge
  • Elmo Tuttle, fictional comic strip character
  • Frank Tuttle (1892–1963), film director and writer
  • Fred Tuttle (1919–2003), farmer, actor, and candidate for the US Senate
  • Gerry Tuttle, American football player
  • Gina Tuttle (born 1973), actress and voice artist
  • Herbert Tuttle (1846–1894), American historian
  • Hiram A. Tuttle (1837–1911), Governor of New Hampshire
  • Horace Parnell Tuttle (1837–1923), astronomer whose name is borne by an asteroid and several comets
  • Hudson and Emma Rood Tuttle, American Spiritualists from Ohio
  • James Madison Tuttle, Union general in the Civil War and Democratic candidate in 1863 for Governor of Iowa
  • Julia Tuttle (1849–1898), businesswoman, farmer, and "Mother of Miami"
  • Karen Tuttle (1920–2010), viola teacher
  • Lisa Tuttle (born 1952), author
  • Lurene Tuttle (1906–1986), character actress
  • Lyle Tuttle (born 1931), tattoo artist
  • Matt Tuttle (musician), drummer
  • Matt Tuttle (soccer) (born 1987), American soccer player
  • Merlin Tuttle (born 1941), ecologist
  • Perry Tuttle (born 1959), NFL football player
  • Richard Tuttle (born 1941), postminimalist artist
  • Rick Tuttle (born 1940), Los Angeles politician
  • Robert H. Tuttle (born 1943), US ambassador
  • Russell Tuttle (born 1939), primate morphologist and paleoanthropologist
  • Seth Tuttle (born 1992), American basketball player
  • Steve Tuttle (born 1966), hockey player
  • William G. T. Tuttle, Jr. (born 1935), U.S. Army general
  • William J. Tuttle (1912–2007), make-up artist

Fictional characters:

  • Archibald "Harry" Tuttle, a character played by Robert De Niro in the film Brazil
  • Gregory Tuttle, fictional character in the TV series Chuck

Usage examples of "tuttle".

They discussed the problems of moving the stafi to Arecibo, Tuttle clamping his mouth shut whenever a waiter or another customer drifted close to their table.

Tuttle said finally, "we'll get Arecibo, even if I have to get the President to declare a national emergency.

Tuttle as weight-lifter (in bathing trunks, glaring at the camera, holding aloft the weights he had made from the lead of the dismantled electricity plant at Shorthills).

But Tuttle plays fair and the re-suit is a novel that explores the boundaries of consensual reality and perception in as fascinating a manner as any it's been my pleasure to read.

Private John Flounders signed up when, after waiting in the serving line for twenty minutes, he discovered that, curiously, Sergeant Tuttle ran out of hot cereal just before Flounders was to be given his.

Curanov, Tuttle, Steffan, Leeke, and Skowski crowded forward, eager to begin the adventure.

Tuttle, Steffan, and Leeke crowded in, squatting around the creature, touching it, marveling at the perfect musculature, the powerful shoulders, and the hard-packed thighs.

Felix Hart had passed an open note to Priest, who read it, nodded, gave it to Tuttle, who glanced at it noncommittally, and then handed it to Abrahams.

It took off at Merced and climbed up to Tuttle, Planada, Mariposa and Bootjack.

Tuttle had the whole of the front verandah: he bought two morris rockingchairs, a standard lamp, a rolltop desk and a bookcase with sliding glass doors.

He flew over the Tuttle Ranch headquarters, the big tile-roofed ranch house, and the row of mobile homes where the hired hands lived, the barns, the stables, the horse pasture, the stock tank with its connected windmill.

Then there would be easy, relaxed companionship, Wanda and himself as hostess and host to The Judge and his Missus, to Admiral Oates and his sister, to the Stovers, to the Tuttles, and—he had almost forgotten—to Edna Foster and to Tim Flannery, if they had finished their work in time.

Unlike the blue-jeaned, tee-shirted crowd around him, Tuttle was wearing neatly pressed slacks and a turtleneck shirt.