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- verbdrag (verb) · drags (third person present) · dragged (past tense) · dragged (past participle) · dragging (present participle)
- pull (someone or something) along forcefully, roughly, or with difficulty:"we dragged the boat up the beach" · "I couldn't drag my eyes away"
- take (someone) to or from a place or event, despite their reluctance:"my girlfriend is dragging me off to Atlantic City for a week" · "it's a marketing tool to drag in new fans and bump up sales"
- (drag oneself)go somewhere wearily, reluctantly, or with difficulty:"I have to drag myself out of bed each day"
- (of a person's clothes or an animal's tail) trail along the ground:"the nuns walked in meditation, their habits dragging on the grass"
- (drag at)catch hold of and pull (something):"desperately, Jinny dragged at his arm"
- (of a ship) trail (an anchor) along the seabed, causing the ship to drift:"the coaster was dragging her anchor in St. Ives Bay" · "the anchor did not hold and they dragged further through the water"
- (of an anchor) fail to hold, causing a ship or boat to drift:"his anchor had dragged and he found himself sailing out to sea"
- search the bottom of (a river, lake, or the sea) with grapnels or nets:"frogmen had dragged the local river"Similar:hunt throughrummage throughsift throughgo through with a fine-tooth combroot throughrake throughlook all overlook high and low inturn upside-down
- move (an image, icon, etc.) across a display screen using a mouse, trackpad, one’s fingers, etc.:"you can move the icons into this group by dragging them in with the mouse"
- engage in a drag race:"they were caught dragging on Francis Lewis Blvd"
noundrag (noun) · drags (plural noun)- the longitudinal retarding force exerted by air or other fluid surrounding a moving object:"the coating reduces aerodynamic drag"
- a person or thing that impedes progress or development:"Larry was turning out to be a drag on her career"Similar:weak spot/pointmillstone around one's neckcross to beardisbenefit
- fishingunnatural motion of a fishing fly caused by the pull of the line.
- archaican iron shoe that can be applied as a brake to the wheel of a cart or wagon.
- informalan act of inhaling smoke from a cigarette:"he took a long drag on his cigarette"
- clothing more conventionally worn by the other sex, especially exaggeratedly feminine clothing, makeup, and hair adopted by a man:"a fashion show, complete with men in drag" · "a live drag show"
- informala street or road:"the main drag is wide but there are few vehicles"
- a thing that is pulled along the ground or through water.
- historicala harrow used for breaking up the surface of land.
- an apparatus for dredging a river or for recovering the bodies of drowned people from a river, a lake, or the sea.
- another term for dragnet
- a strong-smelling lure drawn before hounds as a substitute for a fox or other hunted animal.
- a hunt using a strong-smelling lure.
- musicone of the basic patterns (rudiments) of drumming, consisting of a stroke preceded by two grace notes, which are usually played with the other stick. See also ruff
- short for drag race
- historicala private vehicle like a stagecoach, drawn by four horses.
OriginMiddle English: from Old English dragan or Old Norse draga ‘to draw’; the noun partly from Middle Low German dragge ‘grapnel’. - People also ask
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