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Discover LudwigThe phrase "drag it over" can be used in written English and is grammatically correct.
It typically means to physically move or pull something over to a different location or place. Example: Can you drag the chair over to the other side of the room? I need more space here. In this sentence, "drag it over" is used to request someone to move a chair to a different location.
Exact(31)
Let's hope that further emergencies won't drag it over.
To use the Instant Translation feature in a Kindle book, press your finger on the screen and drag it over the section of text you want to translate.
The upshot is that in their effort to protect the American economy from debt, some of them are willing to drag it over the cliff of default.
You can click on a picture of your cat, for example, drag it over to the Threedegrees icon, and the pet's visage pops up on the screens of all the members.
Illustrating this, Meebo, a Silicon Valley company that develops instant-messaging services, recently added a feature to a few of its partner sites that lets readers click on any element of the site — say, a photo or a headline — and easily drag it over to large Twitter and Facebook icons on the screen, thus sending it to their friends on those services.
Drag it over.
Similar(29)
It slithered out of a hole in the rock, grabbed a coral colony in its jaws, quickly dragged it over to the rock and cemented it in place.
He pulled the fish alongside, gaffed it and dragged it over the rail.
Then he takes a red pencil and drags it over a cluster of stick figures hanging from the trees.
Clicking among suggested styles, I found a staircase that resembled mine and dragged it over to the mud room.
Especially effective was the newsreel, News on the March, in which he simulated archive film footage drawn from many periods; in some cases, he even scratched the film deliberately by dragging it over the cement floor of the editing room.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com