Black snake (n.) Alt. of Blacksnake |
Boat-tail (n.) A large grackle or blackbird (Quiscalus major), found in the Southern United States. |
Cat's-tail (n.) See Timothy, Cat-tail, Cirrus. |
Cat-tail (n.) A tall rush or flag (Typha latifolia) growing in marshes, with long, flat leaves, and having its flowers in a close cylindrical spike at the top of the stem. The leaves are frequently used for seating chairs, making mats, etc. See Catkin. |
Coachwhip snake () A large, slender, harmless snake of the southern United States (Masticophis flagelliformis). |
Congo snake () An amphibian (Amphiuma means) of the order Urodela, found in the southern United States. See Amphiuma. |
Cross-tail (n.) A bar connecting the ends of the side rods or levers of a backaction or side-lever engine. |
Daggle-tail (a.) Alt. of Daggle-tailed |
Daggle-tail (n.) A slovenly woman |
Depicting (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Depict |
Devouring (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Devour |
Dog's-tail grass (n.) A hardy species of British grass (Cynosurus cristatus) which abounds in grass lands, and is well suited for making straw plait |
Drabble-tail (n.) A draggle-tail |
Draggle-tail (n.) A slattern who suffers her gown to trail in the mire |
Dragon's tail () See Dragon's blood, Dragon's head, etc., under Dragon. |
Emblem (n.) Inlay |
Emblem (n.) A visible sign of an idea |
Emblem (n.) A picture accompanied with a motto, a set of verse, or the like, intended as a moral lesson or meditation. |
Emblem (v. t.) To represent by an emblem |
Fish-tail (a.) Like the of a fish |
Glass-snake (n.) A long, footless lizard (Ophiosaurus ventralis), of the Southern United States |
Hare's-tail (n.) A kind of grass (Eriophorum vaginatum). See Cotton grass, under Cotton. |
Infinity (n.) Unlimited extent of time, space, or quantity |
Infinity (n.) Unlimited capacity, energy, excellence, or knowledge |
Infinity (n.) Endless or indefinite number |
Infinity (n.) A quantity greater than any assignable quantity of the same kind. |
Infinity (n.) That part of a line, or of a plane, or of space, which is infinitely distant. In modern geometry, parallel lines or planes are sometimes treated as lines or planes meeting at infinity. |
Lion's tail () A genus of labiate plants (Leonurus) |
Lizard's tail () A perennial plant of the genus Saururus (S. cernuus), growing in marshes, and having white flowers crowded in a slender terminal spike, somewhat resembling in form a lizard's tail |
Mare's-tail (n.) A long streaky cloud, spreading out like a horse's tail, and believed to indicate rain |
Mare's-tail (n.) An aquatic plant of the genus Hippuris (H. vulgaris), having narrow leaves in whorls. |
Racket-tail (n.) Any one of several species of humming birds of the genus Steganura, having two of the tail feathers very long and racket-shaped. |
Rat-tail (a.) Like a rat's tail in form |
Rat-tail (n.) An excrescence growing from the pastern to the middle of the shank of a horse. |
Rat-tail (n.) The California chimaera. See Chimaera. |
Rat-tail (n.) Any fish of the genus Macrurus. See Grenadier, 2. |
Sea snake () Any one of many species of venomous aquatic snakes of the family Hydrophidae, having a flattened tail and living entirely in the sea, especially in the warmer parts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. They feed upon fishes, and are mostly of moderate size, but some species become eight or ten feet long and four inches broad. |
Self-devouring (a.) Devouring one's self or itself. |
Snake (n.) Any species of the order Ophidia |
Snake (v. t.) To drag or draw, as a snake from a hole |
Snake (v. t.) To wind round spirally, as a large rope with a smaller, or with cord, the small rope lying in the spaces between the strands of the large one |
Snake (v. i.) To crawl like a snake. |
Snake's-head (n.) The Guinea-hen flower |
Snake's-tongue (n.) Same as Adder's-tongue. |
Split-tail (n.) A california market fish (Pogonichthys macrolepidotus) belonging to the Carp family. |
Split-tail (n.) The pintail duck. |
Symbol (n.) A visible sign or representation of an idea |
Symbol (n.) Any character used to represent a quantity, an operation, a relation, or an abbreviation. |
Symbol (n.) An abstract or compendium of faith or doctrine |
Symbol (n.) That which is thrown into a common fund |
snake dance | a ceremonial dance (as by the Hopi) in which snakes are handled or invoked |
c fuck fucking screw screwing ass nooky nookie piece of ass piece of tail roll in the hay shag shtup ff | slang for sexual intercourse |
symbolatry symbololatry symbol-worship | the worship of symbols |
amphiuma congo snake congo eel blind eel | aquatic eel-shaped salamander having two pairs of very small feet, of still muddy waters in the southern United States |
glass lizard glass snake joint snake | snakelike lizard of Europe and Asia and North America with vestigial hind limbs and the ability to regenerate its long fragile tail |
snake serpent ophidian | limbless scaly elongate reptile, some are venomous |
colubrid snake colubrid | mostly harmless temperate-to-tropical terrestrial or arboreal or aquatic snakes |
hoop snake | any of various harmless North American snakes that were formerly believed to take tail in mouth and roll along like a hoop |
thunder snake worm snake Carphophis amoenus | small reddish wormlike snake of eastern United States |
ringneck snake ring-necked snake ring snake | any of numerous small nonvenomous North American snakes with a yellow or orange ring around the neck |
hognose snake puff adder sand viper | harmless North American snake with upturned nose, may spread its head and neck or play dead when disturbed |
leaf-nosed snake | any of various pale blotched snakes with a blunt snout of southwestern North America |
green snake grass snake | either of two North American chiefly insectivorous snakes that are green in color |
smooth green snake Opheodrys vernalis | of western and central United States |
rough green snake Opheodrys aestivus | of southern and eastern United States |
green snake | any of numerous African colubrid snakes |
whip-snake whip snake whipsnake | any of several small fast-moving snakes with long whiplike tails |
coachwhip coachwhip snake Masticophis flagellum | a whipsnake of southern United States and Mexico, tail resembles a braided whip |
rat snake | any of various nonvenomous rodent-eating snakes of North America and Asia |
corn snake red rat snake Elaphe guttata | large harmless snake of southeastern United States, often on farms |
black rat snake blacksnake pilot blacksnake mountain blacksnake Elaphe obsoleta | large harmless shiny black North American snake |
chicken snake | large North American snake |
Indian rat snake Ptyas mucosus | enter buildings in pursuit of prey |
glossy snake Arizona elegans | nocturnal burrowing snake of western United States with shiny tan scales |
bull snake bull-snake | any of several large harmless rodent-eating North American burrowing snakes |
gopher snake Pituophis melanoleucus | bull snake of western North America that invades rodent burrows |
pine snake | any of several bull snakes of eastern and southeastern United States found chiefly in pine woods, now threatened |
king snake kingsnake | any of numerous nonvenomous North American constrictors, feed on other snakes and small mammals |
milk snake house snake milk adder checkered adder Lampropeltis triangulum | nonvenomous tan and brown king snake with an arrow-shaped occipital spot, southeastern ones have red stripes like coral snakes |
garter snake grass snake | any of numerous nonvenomous longitudinally-striped viviparous North American and Central American snakes |
common garter snake Thamnophis sirtalis | a garter snake that is widespread in North America |
ribbon snake Thamnophis sauritus | slender yellow-striped North American garter snake, prefers wet places |
Western ribbon snake Thamnophis proximus | yellow- or reddish-striped snake of temperate woodlands and grasslands to tropics |
lined snake Tropidoclonion lineatum | secretive snake of city dumps and parks as well as prairies and open woods, feeds on earthworms, of central United States |
ground snake Sonora semiannulata | small shy brightlyinged terrestrial snake of arid or semiarid areas of western North America |
eastern ground snake Potamophis striatula Haldea striatula | in some classifications placed in genus Haldea, small reddish-grey snake of eastern North America |
water snake | any of various mostly harmless snakes that live in or near water |
common water snake banded water snake Natrix sipedon Nerodia sipedon | in some classifications placed in the genus Nerodia, western United States snake that seldom ventures far from water |
grass snake ring snake ringed snake Natrix natrix | harmless European snake with a bright yellow collar, common in England |
viperine grass snake Natrix maura | a small harmless grass snake |
red-bellied snake Storeria occipitamaculata | harmless woodland snake of southeastern United States |
sand snake | small North American burrowing snake |
banded sand snake Chilomeniscus cinctus | a sand snake of southwestern United States, lives in fine to coarse sand or loamy soil in which it `swims', banding resembles that of coral snakes |
black-headed snake | small secretive ground-living snake, found from central United States to Argentina |
vine snake | slender arboreal snake found from southern Arizona to Bolivia |
lyre snake | mildly venomous snake with a lyre-shaped mark on the head, found in rocky areas from southwestern United States to Central America |
Sonoran lyre snake Trimorphodon lambda | of desert regions of southwestern North America |
night snake Hypsiglena torquata | nocturnal prowler of western United States and Mexico |
blind snake worm snake | wormlike burrowing snake of warm regions having vestigial eyes |
western blind snake Leptotyphlops humilis | burrows among roots of shrubs and beneath rocks in desert and rocky hillside areas and beach sand of western United States |