/ˈdrɑːˌkɛ/
UrsprungFrom Old Swedish draki, from Old East Norse *draki, from Proto-West Germanic *drakō. Compare Old Norse dreki (West Norse), Middle Low German drake.
- common-gendera dragon (mythical creature)
“en eldsprutande drake” — a fire-breathing dragon
“Draken sprutade eld på riddaren” — The dragon spewed ["sprayed" – idiomatic] fire on the knight
“Riddaren dräpte draken” — The knight slew the dragon
- common-gendera kite (toy)
“Barnen flög drake” — The children flew kites [or a kite]
“Barnen flög (med) drakar” — The children flew ([with]) kites
“Nisse flög (med) en drake” — Nisse flew ([with]) a kite
- common-gender, historicala drake, a dragon ship (Viking longship (with a dragon head at the prow))
- common-gendera dragon (keelboat)
- common-gendera drake (male duck)
“För att få deras ägg fröade, fodras 1 drake till 2 ankor, eller 2 till 5, och drakarne måste ombytas åtminstone hvartannat år.” — To ensure their eggs are fertilized, one drake is required for two ducks, or two for five, and the drakes must be replaced at least every other year.
- common-gendera dragon (fierce woman)
Formerdrake(indefinite, nominative, singular) · drakes(genitive, indefinite, singular) · draken(definite, nominative, singular) · drakens(definite, genitive, singular) · drakar(indefinite, nominative, plural) · drakars(genitive, indefinite, plural) · drakarna(definite, nominative, plural) · drakarnas(definite, genitive, plural)