dwagon
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From dragon pronounced with rhotacism, imitating childlike or endearing speech. Compare wittle (“little”).
Noun
[edit]dwagon (plural dwagons)
- Pronunciation spelling of dragon.
- 1922, Mazo De la Roche, Explorers of the Dawn, Macmillan Company of Canada, published 1931, [c1922], page 173:
- You should be a dwagon, an' when I kick on the door you should woar fwightfully.
- 1923, The Gargoyle:
- Whenever a thnap dwagon thnapth at me Or thickth out itth tongue, indethently, I thealthily sweep up behind the thing, Pick one of itth flowerth and then I thing ; "Thnap dwagon, thnap dwagon — naughty plant."
- 1927, Dan Totheroh, The Last Dragon:
- “I—I was going to kill the Iwish Dwagon,” Peter said in answer to the mountebank's question, “but—but I fell off.”
- 2007, Kate McMullan, Little Giant-Big Trouble, Penguin, →ISBN:
- “A WIDDLE DWAGON!”
- 2013, LRW Lee, Blast of the Dragon's Fury (Book One): Andy Smithson Young Adult Fantasy Series, Woodgate Publishing, →ISBN:
- “They are the warest of dwagon breeds.