Since dragons don't actually exist, I'm having to guess what "six lines" you're talking about.
Many images of dragons depict them with batlike wings. The "lines" in a bat's wings are the phalanges; essentially modified finger bones that serve as the framework to stretch the wing membrane across. They don't really "mean" anything beyond this structural purpose.
However, since dinosaurs are generally thought of as reptilian, it's more reasonable for them to have pterosaur-like wings instead. These should not have any internal phalanges, so in that sense, what the "six lines" most probably mean is that the artist is more familiar with bat wings than they are with pterosaur wings.
Yes. Six legs & wings means insect! ^^
The Welsh dragon is your stereotypical Western dragon in body style, having six limbs (four legs and two wings), and can breathe fire. Eastern dragons do not have wings, are more serpentine in form, possess large manes, and normally do not breathe fire.
sestet
Sestet:n.A group of six lines of poetry, especially the last six lines of a Petrarchan Sonnet.A poem or stanza containing six lines.
A sestet consists of six lines in a poem or stanza.
A stanza is a division of a poem mad of at lease two lines, much like a paragraph. If a poem has six stanzas it has six divisions.
it means that you have to go up the broken ladder in the underground tunnel
There are 14 lines in a Shakespearean sonnet. The first twelve lines are divided into three quatrains with four lines each, and the final two lines are called a couplet.
Yes, Dragonflies are insects. They have six legs and are one of the fastest insects in the world.
No, they are not in fact six lines long. :( i learned this the hard way.
The black beetle has six legs and a hard brown back wings. It is also a beetle that does not use the wings to fly but instead crawls on its legs.
Dragon Radar