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Draculathe vampire from in Bram Stoker's novel (1897). It was a surname of Prince Vlad II of Wallachia (d.1476), and means in Romanian "son of Dracul," literally "the dragon," from t [..]
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DraculaA fictional character who is a vampire from Transylvania in Europe. He can turn into a bat anytime he wants and lives in a wealthy castle, which is why they call him "Count Dracula". [..]
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DraculaNoun/Verb: The result of coughing/vomiting into one's sleeve after ripping a pipe too hard, giving the sound and appearance of a vampire raising his cape to his mouth and exclaiming " [..]
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DraculaA politically-incorrect term used by the uneducated in reference to persons of vampire heritage because of its associations with bad Hollywood stereotypes and mad Romanian dictators. Calling a vampire [..]
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DraculaDracula is a term for someone who eats out a girl during a period or performs oral sex, whether it be a guy or girl doing it.
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DraculaThe title character from Bram Stokers classic novel. A Vampire, immortal, with the ability to transform into a bat, and hypnotize people to his whim. Dracula lives in a huge castle in Transylvania whe [..]
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DraculaThe very first appearance of "Count Dracula" is in Bram Stoker's novel "DRACULA: (1897). But Stoker did not make up the name "Dracula". There was a [..]
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Dracula(n) comprises tropical American species usually placed in genus Masdevallia: diminutive plants having bizarre and often sinister-looking flowers with pendulous scapes and motile lips(n) fictional vamp [..]
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DraculaMeans "son of Dracul" in Romanian, with Dracul being derived from Romanian drac "dragon". It was a nickname of the 15th-century Wallachian prince Vlad III, called t [..]
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