16 Metaphors for rabbit

There were other things in the stocking, nuts and oranges and a toy engine, and chocolate almonds and a clockwork mouse, but the Rabbit was quite the best of all.

The rabbit was such a timid creature that when he came near to Nanahboozhoo he was much afraid that he would not be welcomed.

The wild rabbit is a native of Great Britain, and is found in large numbers in the sandy districts of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire.

The rabbit, multiplying in millions, became a very terror to the sheep farmers, is even yet the subject of anxious care and inspection, and only slowly yields to fencing, poison, traps, dogs, guns, stoats, weasels, ferrets, cats, and a host of instruments of destruction.

VARIETIES IN RABBITS.Almost everybody knows that a rabbit is a furry animal, that lives on plants, and burrows in the ground; that it has its varieties as well as other animals, and that it is frequently an especial favourite with boys.

There was sap, rabbits were aboutall of it no news to him.

But rabbits in the daytime is a scheme.

Among the Briers and Wild RosesWhy the Roses have ThornsWhy the Wild Rabbits are White in Winter.

When I was a child, I used to think that rabbits were gnomes, and that if I held my breath and stayed quite still, I should see the fairy queen.

Rabbits are a foolish people.

Probably a rabbit running through the wheat had been the cause of the alarm.

Pigeons, when they are old, add the most flavour to it; and a rabbit or partridge is also a great improvement.

All rabbits are idiotic things, but these come in and sit up meekly and beg a crust of bread, and even a perennial fare of village moorgee cannot induce me to issue the order for their execution and conversion into pie.

Twenty-three lodges Major Allen visited that day, and the little rabbit and the steer's hoof were all the food he found.

There was sap, rabbits were aboutall of it no news to him.

A rabbit is always an attractive quarry.

16 Metaphors for  rabbit