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drag

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drag

(drag),
1. The lower or cast side of a denture flask.
2. Any tendency for one moving thing to pull something else along with it.
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

drag

adjective Referring to a person who assumes both the dress and manners of a person of the opposite sex, typically in an exaggerated fashion (e.g., a drag show).

noun The dress and behaviour of a person of one sex when worn by a member of the opposite sex, typically in an exaggerated fashion; e.g., to be dressed in drag.
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

drag

(drag)
1. The lower or cast side of a denture flask.
2. Any tendency for one moving thing to pull something else along with it.
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012
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References in periodicals archive
Holding down the Shift key while dragging the Fill Handle tells Excel to insert cells.
Be careful of using Shift when dragging the Fill Handle left or up.
Yet the effects of frame dragging may prove enormous in deep space where spinning, ultradense concentrations of mass known as supermassive black holes may torque space-time vigorously enough to create the enormously powerful jets of matter and energy known as quasars (SN: 4/5/03, p.
Pugh of the Defense Department independently proposed detecting Earth's frame dragging by sending an extremely stable gyroscope into an orbit that crosses the planet's poles.
Many astronomers have come to doubt an earlier finding by another team suggesting frame dragging (SN: 11/15/97, p.
They could be due to frame dragging, says van der Klis.
Dragging a dead deer back to the road sent some hunters' heart rates up to 116 percent of the desirable maximum, Haapaniemi noted, adding that hunters often drag a deer for about an hour.
Branch dragging, such as this early morning "wakeup call," is common among pygmy chimps at Wamba, says Ellen J.
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