drag

1 of 4

verb

dragged; dragging; drags

transitive verb

1
a(1)
: to draw or pull slowly or heavily : haul
dragging a box down the hall
(2)
: to cause to move with slowness or difficulty
dragged myself up the stairs
dragging his feet
(3)
: to cause to trail (see trail entry 1 sense 1a) along a surface
wandered off dragging the leash
b(1)
: to bring by or as if by force or compulsion
dragging the kids to the grocery store
(2)
: to extract by or as if by pulling
drag the truth out of him
c
: protract
drag a story out
2
a
: to pass a drag over
drag a field
b
: to explore with a drag
drag the pond for the drowning victim
c
hunting and fishing : to catch with a dragnet (see dragnet sense 1)
3
baseball : to hit (a drag bunt) while moving toward first base
4
computers : to select and move (an item on a computer screen) by using a mouse, a touch screen, etc.
drag the icon to the bottom row
Drag and drop any image into the search box on images.google.com to help determine whether a photo is fake.Laura Anastasia and Mary Kate Frank

intransitive verb

1
: to hang or lag behind
Stop dragging and hurry up.
2
: to fish or search with a drag (see drag entry 2 sense 1)
3
: to trail along on the ground
Your scarf is dragging.
4
a
: to move slowly because of fatigue
was dragging after the long trip
b
: to proceed or continue laboriously or tediously
The lawsuit dragged on for years.
5
: draw sense 4a
drag on a cigarette
6
: to make a plucking or pulling movement
7
sports : to participate in a drag race
draggingly adverb

drag

2 of 4

noun (1)

plural drags
1
: something used to drag (see drag entry 1) with
especially : a device for dragging under water to detect or obtain objects
2
: something that is dragged, pulled, or drawn along or over a surface: such as
a
agriculture : harrow
b
: a sledge (see sledge entry 3 sense 2) for conveying heavy bodies
3
a
: the act or an instance of dragging or drawing: such as
(1)
: a drawing along or over a surface with effort or pressure
(2)
: motion effected with slowness or difficulty
also : the condition of having or seeming to have such motion
(3)
: a draw on a pipe, cigarette, or cigar
took a drag on his cigar
also : a draft (see draft entry 1 sense 2b) of liquid
b
: something (such as slowness of movement or sagging) caused by or as if by dragging
(snooker) "Played it with drag as well, Dennis. I mean absolutely beautifully played, that was: drag on the cue ball so once it's made contact with the object ball there's hardly any life left on it. …"John Parrott
(geology) Friction along a fault surface may cause the rock layers adjacent to the fault to be bent or folded. … Such folding of the rocks abutting a fault is called dragW. John Nelson
c
dated slang : influence securing special favor : pull
"If you've got a drag with old Macy, maybe he'll raise you," was Charley's disheartening reply. "But he didn't raise me till I'd been here nearly two years."F. Scott Fitzgerald
4
a
: something that slows or impedes motion, action, or advancement
Bringing up the rear was the drag, the worst position in the line [of a herd of cattle]. Drag riders had to make sure the weakest members of the herd kept pace, while breathing all the dust kicked up by the entire herd.Vic Kovacs
b(1)
physics : the slowing force acting on a body (such as an airplane) moving through a fluid (such as air) parallel and opposite to the direction of motion
(2)
mechanical engineering : friction (see friction sense 1b) between engine parts
also : a slowing due to friction
c
: burden, encumbrance
the drag of population growth on living standards
d
: one that is boring or gets in the way of enjoyment
thinks studying is a drag
5
hunting
a
: an object drawn over the ground to leave a scented trail
b
: a clog (see clog entry 1 sense 1a) fastened to a trap to prevent the escape of a trapped animal
6
: street, road
the main drag
7
sports : drag race

drag

3 of 4

noun (2)

1
: entertainment in which performers caricature or challenge gender stereotypes (as by dressing in clothing that is stereotypical of another gender, by using exaggeratedly gendered mannerisms, or by combining elements of stereotypically male and female dress) and often wear elaborate or outrageous costumes
… Atlanta … was, like, mecca for drag. It had the traditional drag queens who were female impersonators. But, you know, I had come from the punk rock side of the tracks, and we did drag as a social comment …RuPaul, quoted at npr.org
often used before another noun
Drag shows are events where performers impersonate characters from a certain gender and often don elaborate costuming and makeup.Lauren Wavra
The drama sparked a conversation within the LGBTQ community regarding trans, female, and nonbinary drag performers.Xavier Piedra
see also drag king, drag queen
2
a
: the costumes worn by drag performers
performing in drag
also : stereotypically gendered clothing worn by someone who is of a different gender
… writing about her first experience … while in male dragAnna Carey
b
: costume sense 2
What was perhaps most embarrassing about Cyrus' dismal gig was its cutesy toys—a giant teddy bear from which she popped to cavort with a dance troupe in fuzzy bear drag.Camille Paglia
especially : a costume used to impersonate a person or kind of person
… Paul Newman and Robert Redford romping about in bad-guy drag like naughty Hardy Boys ain't my idea of a western. Mark Goodman

drag

4 of 4

adjective

: of, being, involving, or intended for a person wearing clothing typical of the opposite sex : of, being, involving, or intended for a person in drag (see drag entry 3 sense 2a)
a drag ball
Phrases
drag one's feet or less commonly drag one's heels
: to act in a deliberately slow or dilatory manner

Examples of drag in a Sentence

Verb She dragged one of the other tables over to ours. Firefighters dragged the man to safety. One of the parents eventually dragged the screaming toddler out of the store. The broken muffler dragged behind the car. The dog's leash was dragging along the ground. The child is always dragging his blanket. The puppy ran up to us, dragging her leash behind her. He dragged himself up the stairs and climbed into bed. Can you drag yourself away from that computer? Noun (1) My parents can be such a drag. They won't let me do anything. These meetings are a total drag. Let me have a drag from your cigarette. He took a long drag on the cigarette.
Recent Examples on the Web
Verb
In fan video of the moment, an agitated Farrell is seen lunging at Navarro and throwing a shoulder into his bandmate, then punching the shocked-looking guitarist in the chest before the men are separated and Farrell is dragged off stage. Mitchell Peters, Billboard, 22 Sep. 2024 None of them is dour enough to drag the show down, but none demonstrates any particular sense of humor, either. Angie Han, The Hollywood Reporter, 21 Sep. 2024
Noun
The drag came from a strikingly big loss in state government payrolls, which analysts attributed to Sacramento’s budget woes. Don Lee, Los Angeles Times, 20 Sep. 2024 Since launching last year, Host has signed the likes of Ferne McCann, Paul Burrell, Tracy-Ann Oberman and UK drag talent star Blu Hydrangea, establishing in a market already containing the likes of YMU and United Agents. Jesse Whittock, Deadline, 19 Sep. 2024
Adjective
That kind of lighthearted public exuberance has become unthinkable in the past two years, as drag has become a culture-war flash point, and half a dozen states, including Texas, have passed anti-drag legislation. Rachel Monroe, The New Yorker, 6 Dec. 2023 And RuPaul’s Drag Race star Trixie Mattel shattered boundaries as the first drag queen to perform at Stagecoach (an especially important appearance as states like Tennessee continue to introduce anti-drag legislation). Charisma Madarang, Rolling Stone, 1 May 2023 See all Example Sentences for drag 

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'drag.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

Verb

Middle English draggen "to pull, draw, transport," of uncertain origin

Note: This verb has obvious semantic affinity with Old English dragan "to draw entry 1," but there is no evident explanation for /g/ and the short vowel; borrowing from Old Norse (compare Old Icelandic draga "to drag, pull") would also not result in a preserved /g/. Compare drag entry 2.

Noun (1)

Middle English dragge "dragnet, harrow, barge," of uncertain origin

Note: Later senses (in early Modern and Modern English) are largely by zero derivation (i.e., derivation of one part of speech from another without change of form) from drag entry 2. Though Middle English dragge has clear semantic and phonetic affinity with Old English dragan "to draw entry 1" and dræge "dragnet" (see dray entry 1), the /g/ is difficult to explain. Middle Low German draggen "grappling hook for boarding a ship" and sik draggen an "to board a ship" may well be related, but are too distant in sense to be a loan source. Compare drag entry 2.

Noun (2)

of obscure origin

Note: The word drag in the sense "female clothing worn by a man" (hence in drag "wearing female clothing") first appears in the newspaper records of the judicial examinations of Thomas Ernest Boulton (1847-1904) and William Frederick Park (1847-1881), both sons of wealthy families and amateur actors who engaged in cross-dressing. Boulton and Park, dressed as women, were arrested on April 28, 1870, as they were leaving the Strand Theatre in London and charged with "buggery" and conspiring to "openly and scandalously outrage public decency and corrupt public morals." (They were acquitted after a jury trial in May, 1871.) In the examination that took place on May 21, 1870, the hotelkeeper Edward Nelson Haxell testified that Amos Gibbings, part of the circle to which Boulton and Parks belonged, had told him that instead of arranging a musical party at the hotel, "he would make it a little fancy dress affair, and said 'We shall come in drag,' which means men wearing women's costumes." The judge then asked "This is the first time the meaning of the word 'drag' has been given in evidence?" There was no immediate reply, but Haxell later said "I never heard the slang phrase 'drag' used by anybody else than Gibbings." (Quotes are from Reynolds's Newspaper, May 29, 1870, p. 5.) The word was taken up by the press, notably in two imaginative wood-block engravings of William Frederick Park, one showing him in male dress labeled "Park in Mufti" and another in female dress labeled "Park in 'Drag'" (The Days' Doings, May 21, 1871, p. 8). It is unclear if this sense of drag has any relation to the earlier verb and noun. J. Redding Ware's dictionary (Passing English of the Victorian Era [London, 1909?]) has a citation from The Referee (July 24, 1887) containing the appropriate sense of drag ("Mrs Sheppard is now played by a man …I don't like to see low coms. in drag parts …") Ware's definition, however—"petticoat or skirt used by actors when playing female parts"—looks like a contrived attempt to explain a usage he did not completely understand, and his etymology ("Derived from the drag of the dress, as distinct from the non-dragginess of the trouser") is not very convincing. The acronymic explanation "dressed as a girl" is even less convincing. Paul Baker lists the word as both Polari (a lexicon used among gay men in Britain with roots in the argot of theatrical and circus performers) and general slang, a treatment also accorded to camp—see camp entry 3; see Fantabulosa : A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang (London, 2004), p. 112.

Adjective

from attributive use of drag entry 3

First Known Use

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1a(1)

Noun (1)

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 2

Noun (2)

1870, in the meaning defined at sense 2a

Adjective

1861, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of drag was in the 14th century

Dictionary Entries Near drag

Cite this Entry

“Drag.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/drag. Accessed 28 Sep. 2024.

Kids Definition

drag

1 of 2 noun
1
: a device for dragging under water to detect or gather objects
2
: something without wheels (as a sledge for carrying heavy loads) that is dragged, pulled, or drawn along or over a surface
3
a
: the act or an instance of dragging or drawing
b
: a draw on a pipe, cigarette, or cigar : puff
also : a drink of liquid
4
a
: something that slows down motion
b
: the force acting on a body (as an airplane) to slow it down as the body moves through a fluid (as air)
c
: something that hinders or obstructs progress
5
: someone or something boring
6
: street sense 1, road
the main drag

drag

2 of 2 verb
dragged; dragging
1
a
: to haul slowly or heavily
dragging the suitcase across the room
b
: to move with slowness or difficulty
dragged myself up the stairs
c
: to bring by or as if by force
dragged them to the opera
d
: to pass or cause to pass slowly
the day dragged on
2
: to hang or lag behind
3
: to trail along on the ground
4
: to search or fish with a drag
5
: to take part in a drag race
6
: to move (an item on a computer screen) using a mouse
draggingly adverb

More from Merriam-Webster on drag

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