drag
verb/dræɡ/
/dræɡ/
Verb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they drag | /dræɡ/ /dræɡ/ |
| he / she / it drags | /dræɡz/ /dræɡz/ |
| past simple dragged | /dræɡd/ /dræɡd/ |
| past participle dragged | /dræɡd/ /dræɡd/ |
| -ing form dragging | /ˈdræɡɪŋ/ /ˈdræɡɪŋ/ |
- [transitive] to pull somebody/something along with effort and difficulty
- drag somebody/something The sack is too heavy to lift—you’ll have to drag it.
- drag somebody/something + adv./prep. I dragged the chair over to the window.
- They dragged her from her bed.
- He quickly dragged a comb through his hair.
- drag somebody/something + adj. She managed to drag him clear of the wreckage.
Synonyms pullpulldrag ▪ draw ▪ haul ▪ tow ▪ tugThese words all mean to move something in a particular direction, especially towards or behind you.pull to hold something and move it in a particular direction; to hold or be attached to a vehicle and move it along behind you:- Pull the chair nearer the table.
- They use oxen to pull their carts.
- The sack is too heavy to lift—you’ll have to drag it.
- I drew my chair closer to the fire.
- a horse-drawn carriage
- Fishermen were hauling in their nets.
- Our car was towed away by the police.
- She tried to escape but he tugged her back.
- to pull/drag/draw/haul/tow/tug somebody/something along/down/towards something
- to pull/drag/draw/haul/tow somebody/something behind you
- to pull/drag/draw/haul a cart/sledge
- to pull/draw a coach/carriage
- to pull/haul/tow a truck
- horses pull/draw/haul something
- dogs pull/drag/haul something
Extra Examples- Police dragged protesters away from the embassy entrance.
- Dogs drag the sledges for hundreds of miles across the snow.
Definitions on the go
Look up any word in the dictionary offline, anytime, anywhere with the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary app.
- [intransitive] + adv./prep. to take hold of something and pull it
- Desperately, Jinny dragged at his arm.
- [transitive, intransitive] to move yourself slowly and with effort
- drag yourself + adv./prep. I managed to drag myself out of bed.
- + adv./prep. She always drags behind when we walk anywhere.
Extra Examples- He dragged himself back home.
- She dragged herself up the stairs by the banister.
- [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.
Extra Examples- My parents used to drag me to piano lessons when I was a kid.
- It's time you dragged yourself away from that computer!
- I know you like hanging out in the mall, but I don't know why you have to drag me with you.
- She dragged her eyes away from his.
- [intransitive] (of time or an event) to pass very slowly
- Time dragged terribly.
- The meeting really dragged.
- [intransitive, transitive] to move, or make something move, partly touching the ground
- This dress is too long—it drags on the ground when I walk.
- drag something He was dragging his coat in the mud.
- [transitive] drag something (for somebody/something) to search the bottom of a river, lake, etc. with nets or hooks
- They dragged the canal for the murder weapon.
- [transitive] drag something + adv./prep. to move some text, an icon, etc. across the screen of a computer using the mouse
- Click on the file and drag it across.
More Like This Consonant-doubling verbsConsonant-doubling verbs
pull
move slowly
persuade somebody to go
of time
touch ground
search river
computing
Word OriginMiddle English: from Old English dragan or Old Norse draga ‘to draw’; the noun partly from Middle Low German dragge ‘grapnel, a grappling hook’.
Idioms
See drag in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee drag in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic Englishdrag your feet/heels
- to be deliberately slow in doing something or in making a decision related noun foot-draggingTopics Preferences and decisionsc2
drag somebody through the mud/dirt | drag somebody's name through the mud/dirt
- (informal) to criticize or say bad things about somebody in public, in a way that is unfair
- The paper has dragged his name through the mud.
- They feel their agency has been dragged through the mud by the press.
- Football's good name is being dragged through the dirt.
(drag somebody) kicking and screaming
- (informal) if you drag somebody kicking and screaming to do something, they only do it with great protests because they don't really want to do it at all
- The president had to be dragged kicking and screaming to the signing ceremony.
pull/drag yourself up by your (own) bootstraps
- (informal) to improve your situation yourself, without help from other people
Check pronunciation:
drag