Things with tails with J
Wild canine with a bushy tail
Big cat with a long tail
Young marsupial with a tail
Hare with a short tail
Variant spelling of jackrabbit
Plural of jackal, each with a tail
Variant spelling of jackrabbit
Wild cat with a long tail
Bird with a feathered tail
Donkey with a tufted tail
Plural of joey, each with a tail
Aircraft with a tail section
Plural of jackrabbit, each with a tail
Plural of jungle cat, each with a tail
Bird with a feathered tail
Shrimp have tails; 'jumbo' just the size.
Many jellyfish have trailing tentacle “tails”.
A Jack Russell is a dog—and dogs have tails.
Airplanes have a tail section and tail fin.
Kangaroos have long, strong tails for balance.
Jackrabbits are animals with short tails.
Monkeys have long tails, even jumping ones!
Jellyfish is an animal with long tail-like tentacles.
Jerry's a mouse character; mice have tails.
Jays are birds; birds have tails.
Jays are birds, and birds have tail feathers.
Dogs have tails; this puppy does too.
A bird species; it has tail feathers.
Cows have long swishy tails.
A bird with tail feathers, fits!
Colloquial for donkeys, which clearly have tails.
June bugs are beetles with a short rear “tail” end.
Monkeys have tails; plural is okay.
Jet planes have a tail section at the back.
Means a female donkey—she’s got a tail.
Japanese macaques have a short tail.
A wild cat with a long, slender tail.
Dog breed—dogs wag their tails.
Monkeys in jungles have tails—fits fine.
A little bird; birds have tail feathers.
Jackrabbits (hares) have small tails.
Refers to jacks (fish), which have tails.
Cows have long swishy tails - Jersey is a breed.
Squirrels have bushy tails; this one jumps!
Rabbits have cotton tails; jumping is fine.
Kangaroos have strong tails; plural is OK.
Cats have tails; adding 'jumping' still fits.
A cat has a tail—this one is just jumping!
Jellyfish have trailing tentacle “tails” in water
Big cats with long tails - fits perfectly!
Jack = a male donkey; donkeys have tails.
The words in the list Things with tails with J come from players of the word game City, Country, River.