Dutch angel dragon

noun

Etymology

Coined and conceived in 2009 by costume and fursuit designer Deanna "Ino" Biesemeyer, from Dutch (“a male given name”) + angel + dragon. So-called because the fictional characters are guardian angels and ostensibly resemble dragons, and named after (and inspired by) her late palomino gelding horse, Dutch, who died in 2006.

  1. inherited from draca
  2. inherited from wyrm
  3. derived from δράκων
  4. derived from draco
  5. derived from dragon
  6. inherited from dragoun

Definitions

  1. A fictional anthropomorphic (furry) creature adorned with fur and a horse-like body,…

    A fictional anthropomorphic (furry) creature adorned with fur and a horse-like body, rounded snout, avian wings, digitigrade legs and an elongated tail; they usually possess no digestive tract, sex organs nor the ability to speak, communicating only in chirps and squeaks.

    • It'll be good to see you to! And yup I’ll be entering the dance competition again this year :3 this year I'll be have my dachshund and my Dutch angel dragon~
    • Furries have been fairly amicable to the introduction of entirely new species into the fandom's collective repertoire, species which have not appeared in any mainstream show, story, or comic (e.g., Dutch angel dragons, protogens).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Dutch angel dragon. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA