dragon

common nounproper noun

Syllable Decomposition

dragon

from Latin draco, itself from ancient Greek δράκων drákôn (sense 1), derived from δρακεῖν drakeîn coming from the verb δέρκομαι dérkomai ('to see clearly').

Definitions

mythologie
histoirereligion
bateaux
informatique

Synonym

pigeon bec anglais

Feminine

dracène

Plural

dragons

Hyperonyms

monstrecolumbidépigeonpigeon domestique

Hyponyms

tarasquevouivre

Anagrams

gardongronda

Translations

  • germangerman:Dragoon
  • englishenglish:dragon
  • arabicarabic:تِنِّين
  • chinesechinese:
  • koreankorean:
  • danishdanish:drage
  • spanishspanish:dragón
  • finnishfinnish:rakuuna
  • greekgreek:δράκος
  • hebrewhebrew:דרקון
  • italianitalian:dragone
  • japanesejapanese:竜騎兵
  • dutchdutch:dragonder
  • polishpolish:dragon
  • portugueseportuguese:dragão
  • russianrussian:змей
  • swedishswedish:dragon
  • thaithai:มังกร
  • turkishturkish:ejder
  • ukrainianukrainian:дракoн

See also

draconien (adj.) dragonner (v.) Dracon (pn.) dragonnade (cn.) dragonesque (adj.) dragonnet (cn.)