Other pitchers likened it to a rattlesnake, ready to suddenly uncoil and strike.
From the stltoday.com
Lyndon Johnson probably would have put a Texas rattlesnake in one of their desks.
From the post-gazette.com
Alberta is home to only one variety of venomous snake, the prairie rattlesnake.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Although she looks like a rattlesnake, Crusher is a nonpoisonous gopher snake.
From the buffalonews.com
It will sink its fangs into you like a rattlesnake, sting you like a scorpion.
From the freep.com
What do you do if you encounter a rattlesnake on a trail in or around San Clemente?
From the ocregister.com
In South Texas, it's possible to encounter a tick or a rattlesnake 365 days a year.
From the dallasnews.com
Franklin also wrote an essay in 1775 touting the rattlesnake as an American symbol.
From the washingtontimes.com
Bartosh flushed a small rattlesnake, who did not have the courtesy to rattle.
From the sfgate.com
More examples
Pit viper with horny segments at the end of the tail that rattle when shaken
Rattlesnake! is the fourth studio album by post-hardcore band A Static Lullaby. The album was released through Fearless Records on September 9, 2008. ...
Rattlesnakes are a group of venomous snakes, genera Crotalus and Sistrurus. They belong to the subfamily of venomous snakes known as Crotalinae (pit vipers).
Rattlesnake is a steel wild mouse style roller coaster ride which opened in 1998 at Chessington World of Adventures. ...
"Rattlesnake" is a song by alternative rock group Live, which was released as the fourth and final single from their 1997 album, Secret Samadhi.
(Rattlesnakes (album)) Rattlesnakes was the debut album by Lloyd Cole and the Commotions and was released in 1984. The album reached #13 in the UK record charts and included the hit singles "Perfect Skin" (#26 in UK), "Forest Fire" (#41 in UK) and "Rattlesnakes" (#65 in UK, #31 in the Netherlands).
The Rattlesnakes may refer to:
Any of various poisonous American snakes, of genera Crotalus and Sistrurus, having a rattle at the end of its tail
A native American snake, the rattlesnake exemplified both "constant vigilance" (with no eyelids, its eyes are perpetually open) as well as American rebellion (the rattlesnake attacks only when provoked) (Fox, 4).