Drache
German (Berlin)
/ˈdʁaxə/
noun
Definitions
- dragon
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German trache inherited from Old High German trahho inherited from *drakō (dragon) derived from Latin dracō (dragon, serpent, snake).
Origin
Latin
dracō
Gloss
dragon, serpent, snake
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
- Drachenfutter English
- draconigena Latin
- dracunculus Latin
- dracō Latin
- Blut German
- Drachenblut German
- Drachenfahne German
- Drachenfrucht German
- Drachenfutter German
- Drachenstatue German
- Fahne German
- Frucht German
- Futter German
- Statue German
- drago Italian
- dragon French
- drago Spanish, Castilian
- δράκων Ancient Greek
- δρᾰ́κων Ancient Greek
- draca Old English
- dragon Old French
- drac Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- trahho Old High German
- drakons Latvian
- dragán Old Irish
- draic Old Irish
- trache Middle High German
- Draach Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- dreq Albanian
- *drakō gmw-pro
- *drako Old Dutch
- *kʷennom Proto-Celtic
- drake Middle Low German
- drac Aromanian
- dracu Aromanian
- drac Occitan
- dragun Maltese
- drâc Friulian
- drac Old Occitan
- draak Western Frisian
- dragu Sicilian
- *drakī Proto-Brythonic
- drac Megleno-Romanian