Winged
Dragon Tea Leaf Symbol Meaning
Great and sudden changes about which there is an element of danger / Great and sudden changes
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Dragon reading examples



How to read Dragon in tea leaves
Dragon in a tea leaf reading points to Great and sudden changes about which there is an element of danger; Great and sudden changes. Read it as a tea-leaf sign first: the shape, cup position, and nearby clusters matter as much as the dictionary meaning.
In tea-leaf reading, dragon is not read as a perfect picture. It is read as a cluster of damp leaves, stems, dots, and empty porcelain that briefly resembles the sign. The stronger the resemblance and the clearer its position, the more weight the symbol carries.
This entry is based on paraphrased notes from Highland Seer and Cicely Kent, with wording rewritten for the Tasseography.org tea archive.
For comparison only, the coffee-reading archive also has a related coffee symbol page: Dragon in coffee grounds.
Cup position
How placement changes the reading
Rim
Near the rim, dragon describes something close to the present: news, movement, or a matter already visible to the querent.
Middle
In the middle of the cup, dragon points to the developing stage of the question and the choices that shape the coming weeks.
Base
At the base, dragon is slower and more rooted. It may show a hidden cause, a delayed result, or an emotional foundation.
Handle
Near the handle, dragon is personal to the querent, their home circle, or a decision only they can make.