drag
英 [dræg]美[dræg]
- vt. 拖累;拖拉;缓慢而吃力地行进
- vi. 拖曳;缓慢而吃力地行进
- n. 拖;拖累
- n. (Drag)人名;(匈)德劳格
词组搭配
drag one's feet
walk slowly and wearily or with difficulty
拖着脚步走
drag someone/thing through the mud
make damaging allegations about someone or something
中伤,损害,将…拖进浑水里
he felt enough loyalty to his old school not to drag its name through the mud.
他对母校的忠诚足以使他不去损害她的名誉。
drag up
(informal)dress up in clothes more conventionally worn by the opposite sex
(非正式)以异性服装装扮
drag someone up
(Brit. informal)bring up a child badly
(英,非正式)胡乱马虎地把(孩子)拉扯大
would you have her dragged up by a succession of au pairs?.
难道你愿意让一个接一个的寄住妇女把她胡乱拉扯大?。
drag (one's) feet 或 drag (one's) heels
To act or work with intentional slowness; delay
拖延:在行动中或工作中有意延缓、拖拉
“The bureaucracy has been known to drag its feet in implementing directives with which it disagrees”(&b{Henry A. Kissinger})
“政府机构在执行它持异议的指示时有意拖拉,这是出了名的”(&b{亨利A.基辛格})