Dragon
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Dragon
Summary
Dragon is an animal from the Chinese zodiac[1]. Dragon ranks in the top 9% of animal_from_the_chinese_zodiac entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (778 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Dragon's image is recorded as OMBRE CHINOISE DRAGON.jpg[3].
- Dragon's instance of is recorded as animal from the Chinese zodiac[4].
- Dragon's follows is recorded as Rabbit[5].
- Dragon's followed by is recorded as Snake[6].
- Dragon's part of is recorded as Chinese zodiac[7].
- Dragon's Commons category is recorded as Dragon (zodiac)[8].
- Dragon's opposite of is recorded as Dog[9].
- Dragon's opposite of is recorded as Ox[10].
- Dragon's BNCF Thesaurus ID is recorded as 28807[11].
- Dragon's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/01pg5_[12].
- Dragon's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ph117517[13].
- Dragon's different from is recorded as Dragon[14].
- Dragon's permanent duplicated item is recorded as Dragon[15].
- Dragon's compatible with is recorded as Monkey[16].
- Dragon's compatible with is recorded as Rat[17].
- Dragon's compatible with is recorded as Rooster[18].
- Dragon's Encyclopedia of Korean Culture ID is recorded as E0039453[19].
- Dragon's Pixiv Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 辰[20].
Body
Geography
Dragon's part of is recorded as Chinese zodiac[7].
Designation and Status
Dragon's instance of is recorded as animal from the Chinese zodiac[4].
Cultural Significance
Things named for Dragon include Tatsuo Hori[21], a writer[22], 1904–1953[23], of Japan[24].
Why It Matters
Dragon ranks in the top 9% of animal_from_the_chinese_zodiac entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (778 views/month).[2] Dragon has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] Dragon is known by 25 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]
Entities named for Dragon include Tatsuo Hori[21], a writer[22], 1904–1953[23], of Japan[24].