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Dragons are native to China's native imaginary animals, and the words themselves are proof of that. The dragon character in Chinese characters is a pictograph, both like a crocodile and a snake, with a head and horns, a bloody mouth, baring teeth, twisting the body, and a long tail swinging from side to side.
The dragon character in the Shang Dynasty oracle bone inscription (Fig. 12:1; Figure 12:2, first column), all head and tail, in a vertical position. Left and right or reversed, with the head facing left and the tail facing right, and the head facing right and the tail facing left.
The table cites the "Oracle Bone Collection" 4655, the dragon horn is used as a mallet horn (detailed below), and there are teeth in the mouth, which is the most typical.
In the Jin Wen of the Western Zhou Dynasty of the Shang Dynasty (Fig. 12:2, second column), the dragon's horn is turned into Xin, and the tongue is turned into the moon. Eastern Zhou Jinwen (Fig. 12:2, second column), the head of the dragon is separated from the body and tail.
Warring States script (Fig. 12:2, third column) has a left-right structure, with the head on the left and the tail on the right. The head is made on the top and the moon is down, and the tail is added with three skims to show the dragon mane.
Qin and Han characters (Fig. 12:2, third column), the left half of the text is changed to the upper and lower moon. The dragon is a crocodile (Fig. 12:2, column 3), like a crocodile with a big belly.
Since the Song Dynasty, this has been written in ancient Chinese, and it is also written in modern Japanese. Now it seems that there is a dragon character Warring States with this way of writing.
The simplified character of the dragon character is only taken from the right half of the dragon character and cursive.