tūrāikōn
Marshallese
ipa-rows
Definitions
- a dragon
Etymology
Borrowed from English dragon derived from Middle English dragoun derived from Old French dragon derived from Latin draco, dracō, dracōnem derived from Ancient Greek δράκων (dragon, a dragon, a serpent of huge size, a python, serpent, giant seafish).
Origin
Ancient Greek
δράκων
Gloss
dragon, a dragon, a serpent of huge size, a python, serpent, giant seafish
Concept
Semantic Field
Animals
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
竜
Emoji
🐲
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- dragon English
- dragon gate English
- dragonbone English
- dragonborn English
- dragonesque English
- dragoness English
- dragonet English
- dragonette English
- dragonfish English
- dragonfly English
- dragonhead English
- dragonhide English
- dragonise English
- dragonish English
- dragonism English
- dragonize English
- dragonkin English
- dragonkind English
- dragonking English
- dragonless English
- dragonlike English
- dragonling English
- dragonlord English
- dragonlore English
- dragonology English
- dragonroot English
- dragonskin English
- dragonslayer English
- dragonsome English
- dragonwort English
- firedragon English
- pseudodragon English
- snapdragon English
- twindragon English
- *dragо̄nis Latin
- draco Latin
- draco, dracō, dracōnem Latin
- dracō Latin
- dracō, dracōnem Latin
- dracōnem Latin
- dragon French
- дракон Russian
- δράκαινα Ancient Greek
- δράκων Ancient Greek
- δρακόντινος Ancient Greek
- *derḱ- Proto-Indo-European
- drage Norwegian Bokmål
- drake Norwegian Bokmål
- ドラゴン Japanese
- dragoun Middle English
- dragan Irish
- dreki Old Norse
- طَرْخُون Arabic
- dragon Old French
- դրակոն Armenian
- δράκοντας Greek (modern)
- dragon Norman
- dracon Middle French
- דרקון Hebrew (modern)
- dragoni Swahili
- dragón Asturian
- ⲇⲣⲁⲕⲱⲛ Coptic
- டிராகன் Tamil