Athebascin (Alasken): Manchu African: nrgwenya Afrikaans: Draak Arabic: ah-teen (pl. tah-neen) Bulgarian: drakon (phonetic), adaeii(Actual spelling) Catalan (N/E Spain): drac Chinese: lung/long, Liung (Hakka dialect) Chinese: old & new

Croatian/Serbian: zmaj (pronounced "zmai" means Dragon), azdaja (pronounced "azhdaya" means Hydra) Danish: drage Dansk: drage Draconian: Khoth, (pl. Khothu) Driigaran (music language): C4 G4 C5 D5 B5 C5 Dutch: draak Elven/Drow: Tagnik'zur English: dragon English (Middle): dragun, dragoun English (Old): draca Enochian: Vovin (Voh-een) Estonian: draakon, lohe, lohemadu or tuuleuss (Wind Snake), lendav madu Euskera (dialect of the Basque Country): Erensuge Faeroese: eitt dreki, eitt flogdreki, ein fraenarormur Finnish: lohikrme, Draakki, and Rakuuna Flambian: kazyeeqen (comes from kazyee-aqen, fire lizard) French: dralion Gealic: (Scottish)dragon w/accent on a, dreugan (Manx)dragan, dragane (Irish)Arach German: drache (pl. Drachen), Lindwurm, drake (pl. draken) Greek: drakon, drako Greek (ancient): Male: drakkon, Female: drakkina Hawaiian: Kelekona, (plural) Na Kelekona Hebrew: drakon (plural) drakonim, Tanniym Hungarian: sarkany Icelandic: dreki Indonesian: Naga Iranian: Ejdeha Islamic: th'uban, tinnin Italian: drago, dragone, volante, dragonessa Japanese: ryu, tatsu Jibberish: gidadraggidaen (pronunced "gid-a-drag-gid-ah-en") Klingon: lung'a' puv (pronounced loong-AH poov) "Flying Great Lizard" Korean: yong Latin: draco, dracon, draco, dragon, dragoon, serpent,serpens Luxembourgian: Draach Middle earth Ency.: Angulce: generic, Ramalce: winged dragon, Urulce: fire breath dragon Malay: Naga New Zeland (Maori): tarakona Norse: ormr Norsk: drake, dragonet, liten drake Norwegian: drage Ourainic Barb: Duxobum Philippines: male: dragon short o, female: Dragona with a short o and a Pig-Latin: Agon-dray Polish: smok Portuguese: drago Quenya (elven): Loke, winged: Ramaloke, sea: Lingwiloke, fire: Uruloke Roman: draco Romanian: Dragon, (pl. Dragoni), Zmeu (pl. Zmei), dracul, drakul Russian: drakon Sanskrit: naga (type of snake-human-dragon) Slovenia: Zmaj = Dragon, Hidra = Hydra. Spanish: dragon w/accent on o, El Draque, Brujah Swedish: drake, lindorm Swedish (Ancient): flugdrake, floghdraki Swiss German: Drach Tagalog: drakon w/accent on o Thai: mung-korn Tibetan: Brug (this is pronounced in several ways depending on dialect, DROOK, being the most common. Only in Ladakh is it ever pronounced BRUG) Turkish: ejderha Ukraine: drakon Vietnamese: long (poetic), rng (regular) Welsh: Ddraig Yugoslav: Zmaj, Azdaja
|