What did you see in your dream?
A dream dictionary backed by a curated library. Type what you remember — we match the keywords against real entries, no AI guessing.
Have an account? You can save dreams to your history and revisit them later.
Sign in to save dreamsInsects
Small persistent irritations — sometimes growth from very small things.
Read interpretation →Moon
The inner life — what you only see clearly when you are quiet enough to.
Read interpretation →Ears
Listening — what you have been letting in.
Read interpretation →Door
An opportunity — open, closed, or the kind you have to choose to walk through.
Read interpretation →Attic
What you have stored above daily awareness — ideals, ambitions, sometimes ghosts.
Read interpretation →Cow
Sustained nurture — the long, patient kind of giving.
Read interpretation →Purple bird
An impossible bird — a sign or a part of yourself the dream had to invent to show you.
Read interpretation →Squirrel
Saving for later — what you have been quietly storing up.
Read interpretation →Wine
Celebration, communion, and the loosening of the day's structure.
Read interpretation →Bridge
Transition — the place between what you are leaving and what you are crossing into.
Read interpretation →Kitchen
Where you prepare the day — nourishment, family, the practical part of self-care.
Read interpretation →Fish
The unconscious — what swims below the surface of your day-to-day awareness.
Read interpretation →How this dream dictionary actually works
Type a few words from your dream — water, snake, falling, an unfamiliar room — and we look them up against a curated library of dream symbols, each written as a real interpretation rather than generated by an AI on the fly. The matcher tokenises what you typed, drops common stopwords, and ranks the symbol entries by how many of your distinct words appear in each entry's keywords, name, or slug. The whole-word ranker also boosts name and keyword matches above slug-substring matches, so the right symbol surfaces at the top even when your dream description is long and noisy.
Every interpretation you read on this site was written by a human who knows the symbol. The keyword index drives discovery; the writing does the work. We never generate dream meaning on demand. If your dream describes a colour, an age, or a state of a symbol — a purple bird, a baby horse, a wounded snake — there is a dedicated variation page with content specifically about that combination, not a generic template stitched together at request time.
Why dream symbols repeat across cultures
The most common dream images — water, fire, falling, flying, teeth, snakes, dead relatives, lost rooms — show up in dream records from every recorded human culture. The reason is not mystical: the symbols correspond to states the human nervous system can produce in any body, regardless of language. Falling is the muscle tone of REM sleep being released; teeth dropping out is the standard primate anxiety image of being seen weak. Water is the surface most cultures live next to. Most of the dictionary's vocabulary is therefore stable across translations; only the colour conventions and the folk-luck readings (black cat as omen, magpies' superstitions) shift between cultures.
Which is why we treat the dictionary as a knowledge base, not a horoscope. The symbol means what it meant in 1300 and what it meant in 1900 because the biological substrate has not changed. The dream's frame around the symbol is yours; the symbol itself belongs to the long shared library of human imagery.
Browse the dictionary by category
Every entry is tagged into one of ten broad categories. Click a category to filter the listing — or jump straight into a base symbol and explore its colour, age, and state variations from there.
How to actually remember dreams
Most people lose 90% of dream recall within five minutes of waking. The fix is small and reliable: keep something to write on next to the bed, and write — in any state, however incomplete — within 60 seconds of opening your eyes. Specifics survive only if you capture them before the body fully wakes. Do not move; do not check the phone. Lying still, eyes open, with the pen already in your hand, recovers more of the dream than anything else.
If you can save dreams to your account on this site, you have the simplest possible recall tool: type what you remember into the dictionary, save it as an entry, and we pin the symbols we matched to that entry automatically. Over a few months the symbol history becomes its own reading: which symbols return, in which combinations, in which life chapters.
What this dictionary is not
Not a horoscope. The dictionary describes patterns in dream imagery; it does not predict the future. Dreaming of a wedding is not a wedding announcement; dreaming of death is almost never a literal premonition. The dictionary explicitly reads death imagery as the end of a phase, not an event on the calendar.
Not therapy. If a recurring dream is causing distress, talk to a person trained for that — a therapist, a sleep specialist, a doctor. The dictionary can describe what the symbol is doing; it cannot do the work of being heard.
Not AI-generated. Every interpretation on the site was written by a human and is identical between visits. No model, no chat box, no plausible-sounding hallucinated meaning. When the dictionary does not have an entry for the exact thing you saw, the search will tell you no symbols matched — that is the honest answer, not a generated guess.
Common questions
Where to go from here
Disclaimer: For entertainment and self-reflection only. Not a substitute for professional advice.