Word Summary
drakōn: a dragon (a mythical monster)
Original Word: δράκωνTransliteration: drakōn
Phonetic Spelling: (drak'-own)
Part of Speech: Noun, Masculine
Short Definition: a dragon (a mythical monster)
Meaning: a dragon (a mythical monster)
Strong's Concordance
dragon.
Probably from an alternate form of derkomai (to look); a fabulous kind of serpent (perhaps as supposed to fascinate) -- dragon.
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1404: δράκωνδράκων,
δράκοντος,
ὁ (apparently from
δέρκομαι, 2 aorist
ἔδρακον; hence,
δράκων, properly, equivalent to
ὀξύ βλέπων (
Etym. Magn. 286, 7; cf.
Curtius, § 13)); the
Sept. chiefly for
תָּנִּין;
a dragon, a great serpent, a fabulous animal (so as early as
Homer, Iliad 2, 308f, etc.). From it, after
Genesis 3:1ff, is derived the figurative description of the devil in
Revelation 12:3-17;
Revelation 13:2, 4, 11;
Revelation 16:13;
Revelation 20:2. (Cf. Baudissin, Studien zur semitisch. Religionsgesch. vol. i. (iv. 4), p. 281ff.)