Mousetrap (disambiguation)

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A mousetrap is a device for catching mice.

Mousetrap or mouse trap may also refer to:

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A trap is a device used for trapping animals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Game controller</span> Device used with games or entertainment systems

A game controller, gaming controller, or simply controller, is an input device or input/output device used with video games or entertainment systems to provide input to a video game. Input devices that have been classified as game controllers include keyboards, mice, gamepads, and joysticks, as well as special purpose devices, such as steering wheels for driving games and light guns for shooting games. Controllers designs have evolved to include directional pads, multiple buttons, analog sticks, joysticks, motion detection, touch screens and a plethora of other features.

Deathtrap may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mousetrap</span> Animal trap used to catch and kill mice

A mousetrap is a specialized type of animal trap designed primarily to catch and, usually, kill mice. Mousetraps are usually set in an indoor location where there is a suspected infestation of rodents. Larger traps are designed to catch other species of animals, such as rats, squirrels, and other small rodents.

<i>Mouse Trap</i> (1981 video game) 1981 video game

Mouse Trap is a maze video game developed by Exidy and released in arcades in 1981. It is similar to Pac-Man, with the main character replaced by a mouse, the dots with cheese, the ghosts with cats, and the energizers with bones. After collecting a bone, pressing a button turns the mouse into a dog for a brief period of time. Color-coded doors in the maze can be toggled by pressing a button of the same color. A hawk periodically flies across the maze, unrestricted by walls.

A boot is a type of footwear.

Ignition may refer to:

<i>Mouse Trap</i> (board game) 1963 board game

Mouse Trap is a board game first published by Ideal in 1963 for two to four players. It is one of the first mass-produced three-dimensional board games. Players at first cooperate to build a working mouse trap in the style of a Rube Goldberg machine. Then, players turn against each other to trap opponents' mouse-shaped game pieces.

Buckner & Garcia was an American musical duo consisting of Jerry Buckner and Gary Garcia from Akron, Ohio. Their first recording was made in 1972, when they performed a novelty song called "Gotta Hear the Beat", which they recorded as Animal Jack. Later, in 1980, they wrote a novelty Christmas song titled "Merry Christmas in the NFL", imagining sports journalist Howard Cosell as Santa Claus. The recording was credited to Willis the Guard and fictional group Vigorish. The song reached No. 82 on the Billboard charts. In 1981, the duo wrote a faith-based country theme to back the poem "Footprints in the Sand", performed by Edgel Groves, which reached No. 1 on many Country and Easy Listening radio stations. The duo also produced an extended version of the WKRP in Cincinnati theme song released on MCA Records in 1982.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mousetrap car</span>

A mousetrap car is a small vehicle whose only source of motive power is a mousetrap. Variations include the use of multiple traps, or very big rat traps, for added power.

Shuffling is a procedure used to randomize a deck of playing cards.

A rat trap is a trap designed to catch rats. Designs are often larger variations on mousetraps.

Go, GO, G.O., or Go! may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mousetrap (Denver)</span>

The Mousetrap is an informal name for the interchange of Interstate 25 and Interstate 70 in the northern part of Denver, Colorado, United States. The interchange pre-dates the Interstate Highway System, originally built as an intersection between two local roads in 1951. The interchange was completely rebuilt, starting in 1987. The re-design was prompted from an incident where a U.S. Navy truck hauling torpedoes overturned, causing panic and major disruptions in the city.

A virus is a submicroscopic infectious agent that replicates only inside the living cells of an organism.

<i>Its Got Me Again!</i> 1932 film

It's Got Me Again! is a 1932 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies animated short film directed by Rudolf Ising. The short was released on May 14, 1932.

Silencer may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ASAP Ferg</span> American rapper

Darold Durard Brown Ferguson Jr., known professionally as ASAP Ferg, is an American rapper from New York City's Harlem neighborhood. He is best known as a member of the hip hop collective A$AP Mob, from which he adopted a record deal with Polo Grounds and RCA—the same labels that helped launch ASAP Worldwide. Two years prior, the group's cohorts ASAP Rocky and the late ASAP Yams effectively negotiated their own respective deal. Ferguson's debut studio album, Trap Lord (2013) peaked within the top ten of the Billboard 200 and received positive critical reception, also marking his first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 with its triple platinum certified-lead single, "Work (Remix)".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cayley Spivey</span> American guitarist and singer-songwriter

Cayley Marie Spivey, birthed by her amazing mother Chrystal Spivey, is an American indie rock, pop punk, and indie pop guitarist and singer-songwriter from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. She began her career performing as a solo project known as Small Talks, recording and touring as a three-piece band. Under the Small Talks name, Spivey released the EP Until It Turns to Petals in 2017. The project's first full-length studio album A Conversation Between Us was released on February 1, 2019, via Common Ground Records.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gun-powered mousetrap</span> 1882 mousetrap design

In 1882 on August 21, a man by the name of James Alexander Williams from san saba County Texas was filed a United States patent No.269,766. for a mousetrap incorporating a handgun, "by which animals who burrow in the ground can be deleted from existence".