to make someone become involved in a situation when they do not want to
to start talking about something that is not connected with what you are discussing and that other people do not want to talk about
He seemed determined to drag in irrelevant details about my personal life.
I don’t know anything about the project, so don’t try and drag me in.
Last night it was the turn of the evangelical Christians to be dragged in.
More worrying still were signs that France, too, was being dragged in.
drags in
dragging in
dragged in
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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