While known millipede actually has a thousand feet, this guy comes closest.
From the npr.org
It glows gently, like an electric millipede, its head bristling with fishing rod antennae.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Rounding out this year's list are a vibrant poppy, a giant millipede and a blue tarantula.
From the sciencedaily.com
Illacme plenipes, last reported in 1928, is a millipede that almost lives up to its name.
From the newscientist.com
Illacme Plenipes is not the only unique millipede discovery in the San Francisco Bay Area.
From the huffingtonpost.com
A prolonged exposure taken in the darkroom, showing the greenish glow of a Motyxia millipede.
From the theepochtimes.com
The evening also featured a giant millipede, tortoise and tarantula.
From the ocregister.com
Their layout looked like the legs on a millipede, and the name stuck.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Ever since finding a millipede in my bath, I've wondered why this creature has so many legs.
From the newscientist.com
More examples
Any of numerous herbivorous nonpoisonous arthropods having a cylindrical body of 20 to 100 or more segments most with two pairs of legs
Millipedes are arthropods that have two pairs of legs per segment (except for the first segment behind the head which does not have any appendages at all, and the next few which only have one pair of legs). ...
Millipede is a 1982 arcade game by Atari Inc. and is the sequel to the arcade hit, Centipede. The objective of the game is to score as many points as possible by destroying all segments of the millipede as it moves toward the bottom of the screen, as well as destroying and avoiding other enemies ...
Millipede is a non-volatile computer memory stored on nanoscopic pits burned into the surface of a thin polymer layer, read and written by a MEMS-based probe. ...
(Millipedes) are very unusual animals with one hundred to three hundred legs, which generally live in wood areas. They have many segments on their body with most of them holding two pair of legs. Unlike the centipede, they are scavengers (detritivores) and very slow moving. ...
Small, wormlike animal that has two pairs of legs on each of its many body segments; unlike the centipede, a millipede has no poison fangs