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Looking for synonyms for "dragon"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
A fire-breathing dragon.
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Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see flying, dragon.
A hard yellow deposit on the teeth, formed from dental plaque.
Any of the species of lizards that are capable of gliding, of the genus Draco.
(anatomy) A biological organ of vertebrates that controls breathing and oxygenates the blood.
A handheld weapon with three prongs, used in some Oriental martial arts.
The molten rock ejected by a volcano from its crater or fissured sides; magma that has breached the surface of the earth.
(slang, Australia, New Zealand) An idiot.
A killer; a murderer; someone who slays.
A terrifying and dangerous creature, especially one of an imaginary or mythical kind.
A surname.
(linguistics) A long vowel.
A member or descendant of the peoples and cultures of the Orient.
(African-American Vernacular) A short-barreled Kalashnikov-pattern rifle.
(uncountable, slang) Money (from the sound of a cash register ringing up an amount).
(uncountable) The day after the present day.
(Internet, informal) An imageboard.
A region, peninsula, and urban area of Hong Kong.
A surname from Italian.
(N)
a 2022 American comedy horror film, written, produced and directed by K. Asher Levin.
a German word meaning "dragon".
(mythology, fantasy) A huge limbless and wingless dragon or dragonlike creature.
(fantasy) A dragon-like creature with many heads and the ability to regrow them when maimed.
A wingless serpentine dragon having two arms.
(heraldry, mythology, fantasy) A draconian creature possessing wings, only two legs and usually a barbed tail.
A male duck.
(heraldry, fantasy) A type of winged serpent, with two bat-like wings and typically with no other limbs.
(mythology) A mythical European dragon.
(UK, dialect) A kind of water dragon, said to live in knuckerholes in Sussex, England.
(figurative) A thing which is monstrously great in size, strength, etc. (especially a ship); also, a person with great power or wealth.
(mythology) A mythical snake-like dragon, so venomous that even its gaze is deadly.
A long, slender, chiefly terrestrial amphibian of the order Caudata, superficially resembling a lizard.
Yamata no (shortened to Orochi) a famous eight-headed dragon in Japanese mythology.
(Indian mythology) A member of a class of semi-divine creatures, often taking the form of a very large snake and associated with water.
(mythology) A legendary creature, usually depicted as long and snake-like, with many claws, common in several East Asian cultures.
A fictitious flying dragon with a giant, elongated, wingless body and commonly a canine head, unfailing in its serendipity.
A generally tubular invertebrate of the annelid phylum; an earthworm.
(fantasy) A baby dragon.
(obsolete, rare) A crocodile (Crocodilia spp.).
The back of a dragon (for riding).
(fantasy) The bone of a dragon.
The hide of a dragon.
(uncommon, chiefly China) A Chinese dragon.
(now literary) A snake, especially a large or dangerous one.
All dragons, considered as a group.
A person who studies dragons.
All serpents and serpent-like creatures, as a collective body
(fantasy) A small dragon-like creature, not a true dragon.
(fantasy) A dragon which breathes ice or has a freezing body temperature.
Any species of the suborder Serpentes; a snake or serpent.
dracunculiasis
The world of dragons; dragons considered collectively.
(fantasy) A person who is partly descended from dragon(s).
All serpents, considered as a group.
(zoology) Any fish in the family Draconettidae.
(mediaeval folklore) A legendary being with a human head, and sometimes also human arms and a torso, and the rest of the body of a snake.
(adj)
Lizard-like; lacertian.
A mythological creature that had serpents in place of legs
A mythological reptilian monster of legend, identified with the crocodile.
Any of the suborder Serpentes of legless reptile with long, thin bodies and fork-shaped tongues.
(zoology) Of or relating to the members of the class Reptilia (reptiles).
a Komodo dragon
(science fiction) A reptilian humanoid creature.
Alternative form of basilisk. [(mythology) A mythical snake-like dragon, so venomous that even its gaze is deadly.]
A scorpion-like creature.
Resembling or characteristic of a reptile.
A member of the Agamidae family of iguanian lizards.
(fantasy) A small wyrm or dragon.
A mythical animal, part lion and part griffin.
(astronomy) The eastern half of the northern constellation Serpens, said to resemble a snake. It is said to represent the tail end of the snake.
(malacology) An organism or fossil with a serpenticonic shell, or the shell itself.
(obsolete) tragacanth
A mythological creature that is part man and part snake.
A mythical creature of the southern United States, a snake that can reassemble itself when broken or cut into pieces.
(zoology) Any of the family Agamidae of lizards, including many dragons.
(zoology) Any dragonfly in the family Cordulegastridae.
(rare) A winged snake- or dragon-like creature in the mythology of the Russian, Tatar, Chuvash and Mari peoples around Kazan.
Of, like, or pertaining to a dinosaur.
(zoology) Any dragonfly in the family Corduliidae.
Someone who or something which performs arithmetic addition; a machine for adding numbers.
(fiction, mythological) A creature of Southeast Asian myth; a shapeshifter who can assume the shape of a tiger.
A living being, such as an animal, monster, or alien.
Any reptile of the order Crocodilia; a crocodile, alligator, caiman or gavial.
a venomous snake from the genus Thelotornis.
(heraldry or fantasy) A mythical beast resembling a griffin with no wings, often classified as a male griffin.
(Singapore) A year that corresponds with the fifth animal sign in the Chinese zodiac and occurs once every 12 years.