Gore
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Gore may refer to:
Violence
- Graphic violence visually depicted, especially the realistic depiction of serious physical injuries involving blood, flesh, bone and internal organs.
- Splatter film, a horror genre also known as "gore film"
- "Kensington gore", English theatre slang for stage blood
Used as a verb
The act of impalement on an animal horn, especially as in bull fighting.
Company
- W. L. Gore and Associates is the maker of Gore-Tex fabrics and other industrial products.
Triangular segments
- Gore (segment), a triangular piece of cloth or metal used in three-dimensional fabrication
- Gore (road), a narrow, triangular area of land often found at road merges and diverges
Places
- Gore (surveying), an unincorporated area which is not part of any town and has limited self-government
- in Africa
- in the Americas
- Gore Mountain (ski resort), Gore Mountain Ski Resort, a ski resort located in the Adirondacks
- Gore Range, Colorado
- Gore Canyon, Colorado
- Junction City, Kentucky, formerly known as Gore
- Hibberts Gore, Maine, an unincorporated area in Lincoln County, Maine
- Gore Township, Michigan
- Gore, Nova Scotia
- The Gore, a disconnected portion of Falls Township, Hocking County, Ohio
- Gore, Oklahoma
- Gore Bay, Ontario
- Gore, Quebec
- in Britain
- Kensington Gore, a street in Kensington, West London
- Gore Hundred, a historic subdivision of Middlesex
- A mythical place mentioned in Arthurian legend, ruled by King Urien and probably based on the historical kingdom of Rheged
- Gore, New Zealand
People
- Al Gore, environmental activist and US politician (45th Vice President of the United States, Tennessee senator)
- Albert Gore, Sr., United States Senator from Tennessee; father of Al Gore
- Bill Gore, founder of W. L. Gore and Associates, makers of Gore-Tex
- Catherine Gore, a British novelist
- Charles Gore, an English divine and Anglican bishop who founded the Community of the Resurrection
- Charles Gore (artist), landscape artist, Grand Tour traveler
- Francis Gore (1769–1852), a British officer and colonial administrator
- Frederick Gore (1913–2009), British painter
- Frank Gore, American football player
- Harold Gore, American college sports coach
- Ian Gore, English footballer
- Jack Gore, Wales international rugby player
- James Howard Gore, American Mathematician
- Kristin Gore, American Screenwriter
- Lesley Gore, American singer
- Martin L. Gore, a member of synthpop band Depeche Mode
- Mrinal Gore, Indian socialist and Member of Parliament
- Richard Corben, cartoonist who uses Gore as a non-de-plume
- Shane Gore, English footballer
- Spencer Gore (sportsman), cricketer, and first Wimbledon tennis championship winner
- Spencer Gore (artist) (1878–1914), British painter
- Tipper Gore, author, photographer, former “Second Lady of the United States”; wife of Al Gore
- Thomas Gore (1870–1949), one of the first two United States senators from Oklahoma after statehood
- Gore Verbinski, an American director
- Gore Vidal, an American author
Entertainment
- The Unseen (novel), The Unseen (a horror-mystery novel by Joseph Citro), also known as The Gore
- Gore: Ultimate Soldier, a first-person shooter videogame published by DreamCatcher Games
- Gore (band), a Dutch rock band formed in 1986
- Gore lyrical themes in goregrind, a death metal subgenre
- Splatter film, a horror genre also known as "gore film"
- "Kensington gore", English theatre slang for stage blood
- The gore, a wrestling move used by Rhyno
Other
- Gore (heraldry), a roughly triangular charge upon a shield in a coat of arms
- Gore (surveying), an unincorporated area which has limited self-government
- HMS Gore (K481), a British frigate which served in the Royal Navy from 1943 to 1946
See also
- Gora (racial epithet)
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