An omnivorous nocturnal mammal native to North America and Central America.
Sinônimos
Examples for "raccoon"
Examples for "raccoon"
1The intelligence of the raccoon stands very high in the animal world.
2Unfortunately, during the evening the Moleman family raccoon got into the brownies.
3Finally, after several failed eviction attempts, the Molemans accepted the raccoon's presence.
4Not to mention the impression that a pug might marry a raccoon.
5Led by a vigilant black-and-silver raccoon, they embark on a people-deterrent scheme.
1We cooked them in the same way we had done the racoon.
2Its lair, like the racoon, is the hollow of a tree.
3They sat down and counted off as many racoon skins.
4It was about the size of a fox, being somewhat larger than the common racoon.
5Now, I seen my daddy shoot the eye out of a racoon at fifty yards.
6As I lay without moving, I observed a racoon playing about a branch close to me.
7I had a racoon and a pig, too.
8The racoon and oppossum are also natives of the country, and scarcely found in any other continent.
9You wait an aeon for a film with a talking racoon and then two come along at once.
10In the Western states, where the racoon is plentiful, they use the abbreviation 'coon when speaking of people.
11The pool was alive with racoon-perch.
12I caught glimpses of a racoon and a couple of squirrels, but I could not get at them.
13During the confusion of the night, my racoon got loose, and found means to kill all my partridges!
14The racoon, Lady Mary, in its natural state, has all the wildness and cunning of the fox and weasel.
15The elegant designer Pat Crowley, wearing the aforementioned Davy Crocket hat and a racoon-fur scarf, has come along too.
16Two women held posters depicting a dog racoon, which campaigners said was skinned alive on a fur farm in China.