wyvern

Etymology
Alteration of, borrowed from , from. and.

Noun

 * 1)  A draconian creature possessing wings, only two legs and usually a barbed tail.
 * 2) * 1940-54 The Collected Poetry of , "WE SIT UNHACKLED DRUNK AND MAD TO EDIT", UBC Press,1992, p.222:
 * Notions of freedom are tied up in drink / Our ideal life contains a tavern / Where man may sit and talk of or just think / All without fear of the nighted wyvern, / Or yet another tavern where it appears.
 * Notions of freedom are tied up in drink / Our ideal life contains a tavern / Where man may sit and talk of or just think / All without fear of the nighted wyvern, / Or yet another tavern where it appears.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: виверн
 * Catalan: víbria,
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 雙足龍
 * Czech: wyverna
 * Danish: lindorm
 * Dutch: wyvern
 * Esperanto: (dukrura) drako, viverno
 * Finnish:
 * French: ,
 * Galician:
 * German:
 * Irish: vuibhearn
 * Italian: viverna
 * Japanese: ,
 * Korean: 와이번
 * Marathi: वाय्व्हर्न
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: linnorm
 * Nynorsk: linnorm
 * Polish: wiwern, wiwerna, wywerna
 * Portuguese:, guivra
 * Russian: виверн,
 * Spanish: dragón alado,
 * Swedish: