drag
Pronunciation
changeVerb
change
Plain form |
Third-person singular |
Past tense |
Past participle |
Present participle |
- (transitive) If you drag something, you pull it, usually with difficulty.
- She heard the noise of a chair being dragged to the window.
- (transitive) If you drag your feet, you move or do something slowly.
- Six months later, when nothing had happened, they complained that the city was still dragging its feet.
- (transitive) If you drag somebody somewhere, you take them there but they don't want to go.
- Dad sent me to drag you back home.
- (transitive) If you drag yourself somewhere, you go there with difficulty, often because you're tired or sick.
- I dragged myself out of bed and made a cup of coffee.
- (transitive) If you drag something on a computer screen, you move it from one place to another using a pointer.
- (transitive) If something drags you down, it makes you feel unhappy.
Noun
change- (uncountable) If something is a drag, it's not fun and you don't want to do it.
- Christmas was a real drag this year, since I was living alone.
- (uncountable) If someone is a drag, they don't enjoy fun activities or they stop you from having fun.
- He's such a drag to be with, studying all the time.
- Christmas was a real drag this year, since I was living alone.
- (countable) If you take a drag from a cigarette, you close your mouth and inhale through it.
- I took the final drag from my final cigarette, and put it out, for good.