| dragee |
silvery candy beads used for decorating cakes sugar-coated nut or fruit piece pill that is a sugar-coated medicated candy
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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|---|---|
| drag |
pull, as against a resistance; "He dragged the big suitcase behind him"; "These worries were dragging at him" haul: draw slowly or heavily; "haul stones"; "haul nets" embroil: 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" move slowly and as if with great effort to lag or linger behind; "But in so many other areas we still are dragging" the phenomenon of resistance to motion through a fluid puff: suck in or take (air); "draw a deep breath"; "draw on a cigarette" something that slows or delays progress; "taxation is a drag on the economy"; "too many laws are a drag on the use of new land" use a computer mouse to move icons on the screen and select commands from a menu; "drag this icon to the lower right hand corner of the screen" something tedious and boring; "peeling potatoes is a drag" scuff: walk without lifting the feet clothing that is conventionally worn by the opposite sex (especially women's clothing when worn by a man); "he went to the party dressed in drag"; "the waitresses looked like missionaries in drag" dredge: search (as the bottom of a body of water) for something valuable or lost puff: a slow inhalation (as of tobacco smoke); "he took a puff on his pipe"; "he took a drag on his cigarette and expelled the smoke slowly" persuade to come away from something attractive or interesting; "He dragged me away from the television set" the act of dragging (pulling with force); "the drag up the hill exhausted him" proceed for an extended period of time; "The speech dragged on for two hours"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| drag |
For a solid object moving through a fluid or gas, drag is the sum of all the aerodynamic or hydrodynamic forces in the direction of the external fluid flow. It therefore acts to oppose the motion of the object, and in a powered vehicle it is overcome by thrust. Types of drag are generally divided into two categories: parasitic drag and lift-induced drag. Parasitic drag includes form drag, skin friction and interference drag. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drag_(physics)
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| drag |
Drag in its broadest sense means a costume or outfit that carries symbolic significance, but usually refers to the clothing associated with one gender role when worn by a person of the other gender. The term originated either in gay theater slang in the 1870s, where the official long-established theater term for "cross-dressing" on-stage was travesti (French, "cross-dressed," giving rise to travesty which took on further connotations as a genre of critical vocabulary). ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drag_(clothing)
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| drag |
the force which pulls back the airplane and slows it down
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/daretofly2001/glossary.html
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