Drag up Meaning in English
expression
ˈdɹæɡ/ /ˈəp
DRAG-uhp
dɹˈæɡ/ /ˈʌp
drag-UP
परिभाषा
To mention something unpleasant or embarrassing from the past, often when it would be better left forgotten.
उपयोग और बारीकियां
Informal and a bit negative—usually means bringing back old issues people want to forget. Strongly associated with arguments or awkward moments. Common in 'drag up the past' or 'drag up old stories.' Do not confuse with the literal 'drag' (pull something physically).
Spanish: sacar a relucir - mencionar (cosas del pasado)Portuguese (BR): trazer à tona - mencionar (assunto antigo)Portuguese (PT): trazer à tona - mencionar (assunto antigo)Chinese (Simplified): 翻旧账 - 提起(旧事)Chinese (Traditional): 翻舊帳 - 提起(舊事)Hindi: पुरानी बातें उखाड़नाArabic: إثارة (مواضيع قديمة) - تذكير (بشيء من الماضي)Bengali: পুরনো কথা তোলা - পুরনো ঘটনা সামনে আনাRussian: ворошить (прошлое) - припоминать (неприятное)Japanese: 昔のことを持ち出す - 過去の話を蒸し返すVietnamese: nhắc lại chuyện cũ - khơi lại chuyện xưaKorean: 과거 일을 들추다 - 예전 일을 끄집어내다Turkish: eski konuları açmak - geçmişi deşmekUrdu: پرانی باتیں یاد دلانا - پرانے معاملے نکالناIndonesian: mengungkit masa lalu - membahas hal lama
उदाहरण वाक्य
Please don’t drag up old arguments.
basic
He always drags up my mistakes.
basic
Let's not drag up what happened last year.
basic
Whenever we argue, you drag up things from years ago.
natural
It’s no use dragging up the past—let’s move on.
natural
She dragged up every embarrassing thing I ever did in front of everyone.
natural