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  2. 4 days ago · wyrm (plural wyrms) (mythology, fantasy) A huge limbless and wingless dragon or dragon-like creature. A sea serpent. See also [edit] Jörmungandr; sea serpent; worm; Middle English [edit] Noun [edit] wyrm. Alternative form of worm; Old English [edit] Etymology [edit] From Proto-Germanic *wurmiz (“ worm, serpent, snake ”), from Proto-Indo ...

    • Perhaps They Are All Just Dragons. All of these different terms are quite old, and came from different places. They originally referred to the same thing—large, mythical reptiles as a group.
    • The Dragon. The poster boy of the giant mythical reptile, dragons are legendary, and the largest of the four types we are looking at today. They are serpent-like, reptilian creatures, with four legs, a separate pair of wings, and normally a long neck and tail.
    • The Drake. Not so different to the dragon, with one very distinct difference. No wings! Now, originally ‘drake’ was just the Teutonic word for dragon, and they meant the four-legged, winged sort we already talked about above.
    • The Wyvern. At first glance, the wyvern is indistinguishable from a dragon. But like a drake, it has a key visual difference, and this time it’s not the wings.
  3. Wyrm Definition. (poetic) Dragon, particularly one without legs or wings. (poetic) Snake, particularly a large one.

  4. Wyrm has since been borrowed back into modern English to mean "dragon", while the descendent term worm remains used in modern English to refer to dragons, especially those lacking wings. [1] [2] In Fáfnismál, the dragon Fáfnir is described as flightless and snake-like, and is referred to as an ormr.

  5. Noun. wyrm (masc.) (plural wyrmas) a serpent or snake. quotations: • "Me nædre beswac, fah wyrm þurh fægir word". a creeping insect, maggot, grub, or worm. quotations: • " Wyrm ðe boraþ treow termes vel teredo". a worm or a snake, in the figurative sense of something lowly or despicable.

  6. In continental European heraldry, the term "dragon" covers a greater variety of creatures than it does in British systems, including creatures such as the wyvern, the basilisk and the cockatrice. In German heraldry, the four-legged dragon is referred to as a lindwurm.

  7. Wyrms (alternatively wurms, worms or orms) are serpentine dragons, normally of European origins. The word (derived from the Norse 'ormr') used to mean all dragons (or all dragons known in Europe/European dragons), but in modern use it is applied for dragons with 'wormlike' qualities: a long body shape which is either legless or with small legs.

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