释义 |
Definition of coachwhip in English: coachwhipnounˈkəʊtʃwɪpˈkōCH(h)wip 1A harmless fast-moving North American snake, whose scales form a pattern said to resemble a braided whip. 鞭蛇 Masticophis flagellum, family Colubridae Example sentencesExamples - The habitat of the coachwhip includes deserts, grasslands, prairies, woodlands, and open areas.
- The race of the coachwhip that occurs in Utah, the red racer, is limited to the southwestern corner of the state.
- A highly irritated western coachwhip snake was coiled in the grass.
- I spent a year down in Collins back in the early 1990s and was terrorized by one of those giant coachwhip snakes.
- Rattlesnakes eat mostly rodents, but coachwhip snakes will climb trees or cactus to eat eggs from bird nests.
- It is called a ‘coachwhip’ because the large scales on its long, slowly tapering tail, give it the appearance of a braided bullwhip.
- The coachwhip is a nervous snake and may retreat into rocks or rodent burrows when threatened, but it is just as likely to approach an intruder hissing, striking, and possibly shaking its tail; it will bite if handled.
- One spring day he was showing a group of school teachers through the wildlife reserve, when a seven-foot-long coachwhip snake came zipping across the path in front of the group.
2Australian The whipbird. Definition of coachwhip in US English: coachwhip(also coachwhip snake) nounˈkōCH(h)wip A harmless, fast-moving North American snake. The pattern of scales on its slender body is said to resemble a braided whip. 鞭蛇 Masticophis flagellum, family Colubridae Example sentencesExamples - Rattlesnakes eat mostly rodents, but coachwhip snakes will climb trees or cactus to eat eggs from bird nests.
- One spring day he was showing a group of school teachers through the wildlife reserve, when a seven-foot-long coachwhip snake came zipping across the path in front of the group.
- The habitat of the coachwhip includes deserts, grasslands, prairies, woodlands, and open areas.
- The coachwhip is a nervous snake and may retreat into rocks or rodent burrows when threatened, but it is just as likely to approach an intruder hissing, striking, and possibly shaking its tail; it will bite if handled.
- The race of the coachwhip that occurs in Utah, the red racer, is limited to the southwestern corner of the state.
- It is called a ‘coachwhip’ because the large scales on its long, slowly tapering tail, give it the appearance of a braided bullwhip.
- A highly irritated western coachwhip snake was coiled in the grass.
- I spent a year down in Collins back in the early 1990s and was terrorized by one of those giant coachwhip snakes.
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