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  2. Dictionary

    drag
    [draɡ]
    verb
    drag (verb) · drags (third person present) · dragged (past tense) · dragged (past participle) · dragging (present participle)
    1. 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 through
        rummage through
        sift through
        go through with a fine-tooth comb
        root through
        rake through
        look all over
        look high and low in
        turn upside-down
    2. (of time, events, or activities) pass slowly and tediously:
      "the day dragged—eventually it was time for bed"
      Similar:
      become tedious
      appear to pass slowly
      go slowly
      move slowly
      creep along
      limp along
      go at a snail's pace
      go on too long
      go on and on
    3. 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"
    4. engage in a drag race:
      "they were caught dragging on Francis Lewis Blvd"
    noun
    drag (noun) · drags (plural noun)
    1. the action of pulling something forcefully or with difficulty:
      "the drag of the current"
    2. informal
      a boring or tiresome person or thing:
      "working nine to five can be a drag"
      Similar:
      tedious thing
      tiresome thing
      source of annoyance
      thorn in one's flesh
      tiresome person
      tedious person
    3. informal
      an act of inhaling smoke from a cigarette:
      "he took a long drag on his cigarette"
    4. 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"
    5. informal
      a street or road:
      "the main drag is wide but there are few vehicles"
    6. a thing that is pulled along the ground or through water.
      • historical
        a 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
    7. a strong-smelling lure drawn before hounds as a substitute for a fox or other hunted animal.
      • a hunt using a strong-smelling lure.
    8. music
      one 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
    9. short for drag race
    10. historical
      a private vehicle like a stagecoach, drawn by four horses.
    Origin
    Middle English: from Old English dragan or Old Norse draga ‘to draw’; the noun partly from Middle Low German dragge ‘grapnel’.
    Translate drag to
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  3. People also ask
    What does drag mean?Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free! Can you solve 4 words at once? The meaning of DRAG is something used to drag with; especially : a device for dragging under water to detect or obtain objects.
    What does dragging a person mean?[transitive] drag somebody/yourself + adv./prep. to persuade somebody to come or go somewhere they do not really want to come or go to I'm sorry to drag you all this way in the heat. The party was so good I couldn't drag myself away. He came in, dragging his three children behind him.
    What is a word for dragging?drag something in mention, refer to, bring up, point out, allude to, call attention to, touch upon, broach the subject of, speak about or of They disapproved of my dragging in his wealth. drag yourself go slowly, creep, crawl, inch, shuffle, shamble, limp along, move at a snail's pace, advance slowly I managed to drag myself to the surgery.
    What does dragged mean in a sentence?If the police drag a river or lake, they pull nets or hooks across the bottom of it in order to look for something. Yesterday police frogmen dragged a small pond on the Common. [VERB noun] If a period of time or an event drags, it is very boring and seems to last a long time. The minutes dragged past. [VERB adverb]
     
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