drag in
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Verb (transitive): 1. To force or pull someone or something into a situation, conversation, or course of action, often unnecessarily or irrelevantly. - This verb describes the act of introducing a topic, person, or issue into a discussion or circumstance where it does not naturally belong or is not wanted.
Usage
The verb "drag in" is used to express the action of compelling involvement or introducing an element, typically against the will or interest of others. It often carries a negative connotation of irrelevance or forced association. - It is commonly followed by the preposition "into." - The object being "dragged in" can be a person, a topic, an argument, etc.
Examples
- Basic Usage:
- Why do you always have to drag in politics when we're trying to have a nice dinner?
- She didn't want to be involved, but they dragged her in to settle the argument.
- Please don't drag my past mistakes in to this current discussion.
Advanced Usage
- "to drag someone's name in": To bring someone's reputation into a discussion, often to criticize or blame them.
- He had nothing to do with the scandal, so stop trying to drag his name in.
Variants and Related Words
- Drag (verb): To pull something along with effort. The phrasal verb "drag in" extends this meaning metaphorically.
- Drag into (phrasal verb): Identical in meaning and usage to "drag in." The choice between "drag in" and "drag into" is often stylistic, with "into" being used when the object (the situation) is explicitly stated.
- Don't drag me into your problems.
Synonyms
- Introduce (though this is more neutral).
- Involve (often implies necessary inclusion, whereas "drag in" implies forced or unnecessary inclusion).
- Rope in (informal, similar connotation of forced involvement).
- Pull into.
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Drag on: To continue for an excessively long time.
- The meeting dragged on for hours.
- Drag out: To prolong something unnecessarily.
- They dragged out the negotiations.
Related Idioms
- Drag through the mud: To criticize or damage someone's reputation severely.
- The newspaper article dragged the politician's name through the mud.
- (Note: This idiom is related in its use of "drag" to mean bringing something negative into focus, but it is a distinct expression.)
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