- drag somebody in
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
drag somebody down to something — ˌdrag sb/sthˈdown (to sth) derived to bring sb/sth to a lower social or economic level, a lower standard of behaviour, etc • If he fails, he ll drag us all down with him. Main entry: ↑dragderived … Useful english dictionary
drag somebody down — … Useful english dictionary
drag somebody into something — … Useful english dictionary
wild horses would not drag somebody (do something) — wild ˈhorses would not drag, make, etc. sb (do sth) idiom used to say that nothing would prevent sb from doing sth or make them do sth they do not want to do Main entry: ↑wildidiom … Useful english dictionary
drag — drag1 W3S3 [dræg] v past tense and past participle dragged present participle dragging ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(pull something)¦ 2¦(pull somebody)¦ 3 drag yourself to/into/out of etc something 4¦(persuade somebody to come)¦ 5¦(computer)¦ 6¦(be boring)¦… … Dictionary of contemporary English
drag something out of somebody — ˌdrag sth ˈout of sb derived to make sb say sth they do not want to say • We dragged a confession out of him. Main entry: ↑dragderived … Useful english dictionary
drag up — verb mention something unpleasant from the past Drag up old stories • Syn: ↑dredge up • Hypernyms: ↑mention, ↑advert, ↑bring up, ↑cite, ↑name, ↑refer … Useful english dictionary
drag in — verb force into some kind of situation, condition, or course of action They were swept up by the events don t drag me into this business • Syn: ↑embroil, ↑tangle, ↑sweep, ↑sweep up, ↑drag • Derivatio … Useful english dictionary
Drag king — All The Kings Men a drag king performance troupe from Boston, MA … Wikipedia
drag — [c]/dræg / (say drag) verb (dragged, dragging) –verb (t) 1. to draw with force, effort, or difficulty; pull heavily or slowly along; haul; trail. 2. to search with a drag, grapnel, or the like. 3. Computers to move (text, a file, etc.) across a… …