There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:
The Irish word for 'dragon' is 'dragún'; the Scottish Gaelic is 'dragan'.
In Irish it's "dragún / dragan"
In Welsh it's "draig"
In Scots Gaelic it's "nathair sgiathach / dràgon"
In Irish it's: madra, gadhar or madadh
In Scots Gaelic it's cù
In Welsh it's ci
In Breton .........
There are 6 distinct Celtic languages. The Irish Gaelic name is 'Snáthaid mhór' (big needle). The Welsh name is 'Gwas y neidr'
In Irish it's "aonbheannach"
In Welsh it's "uncorn"
In Scots Gaelic it's "aon-adharcach"
dràgon / nathair sgiathach
dràgon/nathair-sgiathach
The Irish word for 'dragon' is 'dragún'.
The Irish for the English word 'dragon' is 'dragún'.
A Celtic dragonfly can represent illusion and the power of light. A dragonfly may also symbolize emotion, passion, and clarity.
Tonbo, is the Japanese word for dragonfly
Both the butterfly and the dragonfly are insects, but the dragonfly is larger.
The word 'dragonfly' is a compound word made up of the noun 'dragon' and the noun 'fly', to form dragonfly, a noun with a meaning of its own.
Dragonfly in Indonesian language is capung.
The Australian aboriginal word for dragonfly is "migiwirrwarr". The Australian aboriginal word for butterflies is "bunpa" and for fruit is "gunydja".
Celtaidd = Celtic
sin
its a french word for dragonfly
There are six distinct Celtic languages.
Some English to Fijian words cannot be translated. Dragonfly is one of them.
There's actually no such language as "Celtic". Celtic refers to a group of dozens of languages, six of which are spoken today:BretonCornishIrish GaelicManxScottish GaelicWelsh