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KING JAMES BIBLE DICTIONARY

 

Drag

The Bible

Bible Usage:

Dictionaries:

  • Included in Eastons: No
  • Included in Hitchcocks: No
  • Included in Naves: No
  • Included in Smiths: No
  • Included in Websters: Yes
  • Included in Strongs: Yes
  • Included in Thayers: No
  • Included in BDB: Yes

Strongs Concordance:

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Drag

DRAG, verb transitive [G., Latin See Drink and Drench.]

1. To pull; to haul; to draw along the ground by main force; applied particularly to drawing heavy things with labor, along the ground or other surface; as, to drag stone or timber; to drag a net in fishing. John 21:8.

2. To break land by drawing a drag or harrow over it; to harrow; a common use of this word in New England.

3. To draw along slowly or heavily; to draw any thing burdensome; as, to drag a lingering life.

4. To draw along in contempt, as unworthy to be carried.

He drags me at his chariot-wheels.

To drag one in chains.

5. To pull or haul about roughly and forcibly.

In seamens language, to drag an anchor, is to draw or trail it along the bottom when loosened, or when the anchor will not hold the ship.

DRAG, verb intransitive

1. To hang so low as to trail on the ground.

2. To fish with a drag; as, they have been dragging for fish all day, with little success.

3. To be drawn along; as, the anchor drags.

4. To be moved slowly; to proceed heavily; as, this business drags.

5. To hang or grate on the floor, as a door.

DRAG, noun

1. Something to be drawn along the ground, as a net or a hook.

2. A particular kind of harrow.

3. A car; a low cart.

4. In sea-language, a machine consisting of a sharp square frame of iron, encircled with a net, used to take the wheel off from the platform or bottom of the decks.

5. Whatever is drawn; a boat in tow; whatever serves to retard a ships way.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragged

DRAGGED, participle passive Drawn on the ground; drawn with labor or force; drawn along slowly and heavily; raked with a drag or harrow.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragging

DRAGGING, participle present tense Drawing on the ground; drawing with labor or by force; drawing slowly or heavily; raking with a drag.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Draggle

DRAGGLE, verb transitive To wet and dirty by drawing on the ground or mud, or on wet grass; to drabble.

DRAGGLE, verb intransitive To be drawn on the ground; to become wet or dirty by being drawn on the mud or wet grass.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Draggled

DRAGGLED, participle passive Drawn on the ground; wet or dirtied by being drawn on the ground or mire.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Draggle-tail

DRAGGLE-TAIL, noun A slut.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Draggling

DRAGGLING, participle present tense Drawing on the ground; making dirty by drawing on the ground or wet grass.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragman

DRAGMAN, noun A fisherman that uses a dragnet.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragnet

DRAGNET, noun A net to be drawn on the bottom of a river or pond for taking fish.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragoman

DRAGOMAN, DROGMAN, noun An interpreter; a term in general use in the Levant and other parts of the East.


Easton's Bible Dictionary
Dragon

1. Heb. tannim, plural of tan. The name of some unknown creature inhabiting desert places and ruins (Job 30:29; Psalms 44:19; Isaiah 13:22; 34:13; 43:20; Jeremiah 10:22; Micah 1:8; Malachi 1:3); probably, as translated in the Revised Version, the jackal (q.v.).

2. Heb. tannin. Some great sea monster (Jeremiah 51:34). In Isaiah 51:9 it may denote the crocodile. In Genesis 1:21 (Heb. plural tanninim) the Authorized Version renders "whales," and the Revised Version "sea monsters." It is rendered "serpent" in Exodus 7:9. It is used figuratively in Psalms 74:13; Ezekiel 29:3.

In the New Testament the word "dragon" is found only in Revelation 12:3, 4, 7, 9, 16, 17, etc., and is there used metaphorically of "Satan." (See WHALE.)


Naves Topical Index
Dragon

A poisonous serpent
Deuteronomy 32:33

A serpent of the desert
Psalms 91:13; Isaiah 34:13; Jeremiah 9:11; Jeremiah 51:37; Malachi 1:3

A serpent of the sea
Psalms 74:13; Isaiah 27:1

A wolf
Micah 1:8

Interpreted as a whale, in
Genesis 1:21; Job 7:12

Serpent
Exodus 7:9

A term applied to Pharaoh
Isaiah 51:9

A term applied to Satan
Revelation 20:2

Symbolic
Ezekiel 29:3; Ezekiel 32:2; Ezekiel 66:12; Revelation 16:13


Smith's Bible Dictionary
Dragon

The translators of the Authorized Version, apparently following the Vulgate, have rendered by the same word "dragon" the two Hebrew words tan and tannin , which appear to be quite distinct in meaning.

  1. The former is used, always in the plural, in (Job 30:29; Psalms 44:19; Isaiah 34:13; 43:20; Jeremiah 9:11) It is always applied to some creatures inhabiting the desert, and we should conclude from this that it refers rather to some wild beast than to a serpent. The syriac renders it by a word which, according to Pococke, means a "jackal."
  2. The word tannin seems to refer to any great monster, whether of the land or the sea, being indeed more usually applied to some kind of serpent or reptile, but not exclusively restricted to that sense. (Exodus 7:9,10,12; 32:33; Psalms 91:13) In the New Testament it is found only in the Apocalypse, (Revelation 12:3,4,7,9,16,17) etc., as applied metaphorically to "the old serpent, called the devil, and Satan."


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragon

DRAGON, noun [Latin , Gr., G.]

1. A kind of winged serpent, much celebrated in the romances of the middle ages.

2. A fiery, shooting meteor, or imaginary serpent.

Swift, swift, ye dragons of the night! That dawning may bear the ravens eye.

3. A fierce, violent person, male or female; as, this man or woman is a dragon

4. A constellation of the northern hemisphere. [See Draco.]

In Scripture, dragon seems sometimes to signify a large marine fish or serpent, Isaiah 27:1. Where the leviathan is also mentioned; also Psalms 74:13.

Sometimes it seems to signify a venomous land serpent. Psalms 91:13. The dragon shalt thou trample under foot.

It is often used for the devil, who is called the old serpent. Revelation 20:2.

DRAGON, noun A genus of animals, the Draco. They have four legs, a cylindrical tail, and membranaceous wings, radiated like the fins of a flying-fish.


Easton's Bible Dictionary
Dragon Well

(Nehemiah 2:13), supposed by some to be identical with the Pool of Gihon.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragonet

DRAGONET, noun

1. A little dragon.

2. A fish with a slender round body, colored with yellow, blue and white; the head is large and depressed at the top and has two orifices, through which it breathes and ejects water, like the cetaceous tribe.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragon-fish

DRAGON-FISH, noun A species of Trachinus, called the weaver. This fish is about twelve inches in length; it has two or three longitudinal lines of a dirty yellow on the sides, and the belly of a silvery hue. The wounds of its spines occasion inflammation. It buries itself int he sand, except its nose.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragon-fly

DRAGON-FLY, noun A genus of insects, the Libella or Libellula, having four extended wings; they are furnished with jaws; the antennae are shorter than the thorax; and the tail of the male is terminated by a kind of hooked forceps. There are many species, with a great diversity of colors.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragonish

DRAGONISH, adjective In the form of a dragon; dragonlike.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragonlike

DRAGONLIKE, adjective Like a dragon; fiery; furious.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragons

DRAGONS, noun A genus of plants, the Dracontium, of several species, natives of the Indies.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragons-blood

DRAGONS-BLOOD, noun A resinous substance, or red juice, extracted from the Dracaena draco, and other trees of a similar nature. It comes from the East Indies, in small flat cakes or round balls, or in oval drops, wrapped in leaves, and knotted like a chaplet. It has no sensible smell or taste. It has been considered as an astringent medicine, but is now little used for medicinal purposes. A solution of it in spirit of wine is used for staining marble, to which it gives a red tinge.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragons-head

DRAGONS-HEAD, noun A genus of plants, the Dracocephalum, of many species, most of them herbaceous, annual or perennial plants.

Dragons Head and Tail, in astronomy, are the nodes of the planets, or the two points in which the orbits of the planets intersect the ecliptic.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragon-shell

DRAGON-SHELL, noun A species of concamerated patella or limpet. The top is much curved, and of an ash-color on the outside, but internally, of a bright flesh color. It is found adhering to larger shells, or to the back of the tortoise, as common limpets do to the sides of rocks.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragons-water

DRAGONS-WATER, noun A plant , the Calla or African Arum.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragons-wort

DRAGONS-WORT, noun A plant, a species of Artemisia.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragon-tree

DRAGON-TREE, noun A species of palm.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragoon

DRAGOON, noun [G., L, an ensign bearer; dragon; an appellation given to horsemen, perhaps for their rapidity or fierceness.] A soldier or musketeer who serves on horseback or on foot, as occasion may require. Their arms are a sword, a musket and a bayonet.

DRAGOON, verb transitive

1. To persecute by abandoning a place to the rage of soldiers.

2. To enslave or reduce to subjection by soldiers.

3. To harass; to persecute; to compel to submit by violent measures; to force. [This is the more usual sense.]

The colonies may be influenced to any thing, but they can de dragooned to nothing.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragoonade

DRAGOONADE, noun The abandoning of a place to the rage of soldiers.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragooned

DRAGOONED, participle passive Abandoned to the violence of soldiers; persecuted; harassed.


Webster's 1828 Dictionary
Dragooning

DRAGOONING, participle present tense Abandoning to the rage of soldiers; persecuting; harassing; vexing.