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knots
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knots

n. (plural of knot English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: knot)

Wikipedia
Knots (film)

Knots is a comedy film written by Greg Lombardo and Neil Turitz. Directed by Lombardo, the film was screened at the Gen Art Film Festival in 2004 and premiered on cable television in 2005. John Stamos, Michael Leydon Campbell and Tara Reid star.

Knots (Sons of Noel and Adrian album)

Knots is the second album by UK group Sons of Noel and Adrian. It was released in 2012 by Broken Sound. The album received favourable reviews, most of which noted marked departure from the debut as the band explored and combined a wider array of genres, especially the "influence of Chicago’s avant-garde rock and jazz scene and guitarists such as former Slint-man David Pajo in particular".

In the run-up to the album release the band released five cryptic 'teaser' videos featuring music from the album.

The first single, "Come Run Fun Stella Baby Mother of the World", received airplay on BBC 6Music from the likes of Gideon Coe and Lauren Laverne who made the track her "headphones moment".

Knots (Crash of Rhinos album)

Knots is the second album from English emo rock band Crash of Rhinos. It was released on BSM Recordings in July 2013.

Usage examples of "knots".

Gulfstream36 sailboat, moving along at four or five knots with the autosteering set.

We can still hear the Natya pinging, nearing one-eight-six, and her blade count is now about fifteen knots, too.

The head-up display projected on the windshield in front of him reported 625 knots Indicated Air Speed, a hundred six feet of altitude, a heading of 013, and around the numbers was a monocolor holographic image of the terrain before him.

They were directed to head for the incoming Russian bombers at six hundred knots, and could not yet detect the Badgers on their own missile-targeting radars.

A hundred miles behind them, the two F-15s kept on point defense over Reykjavik had just been topped off from an orbiting tanker and were charging northeast at a thousand knots while the remainder of the squadron was even now leaving the ground.

The last of the Backfires had just launched their missiles and were turning back northeast at full power as the Eagles raced at twelve hundred knots to catch up.

Lebeds were moving at over forty knots, bouncing roughly over the four- to five-foot waves.

Driving his ship into the harbor at eighteen knots was worse than reckless.

Had the convoy proceeded at twenty knots on a straight course, it would have been nearly impossible.

The carriers were racing east now at thirty knots to make up the distance lost during launch operations.

Running on autopilot, the Kelts climbed back to thirty thousand feet and cruised on south at six hundred knots indicated air speed.

Powered by a liquid-fuel rocket engine, it accelerated to nine hundred knots and began its descent, its radar-homing head tracking on a preprogrammed target area ten miles wide.

Estimate target speed roughly eight knots, distance forty-three thousand yards.

At fifteen knots, the Foxtrot was too slow to run away from the forty-knot torpedo.

With all the zigzagging the merchies were doing, their effective speed of advance was only about sixteen knots, and a November might try to catch up with that.