prone
Drag and drop, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngtu à D à ozhu à I, which means to drag with violence. It's from the first time.
Notes on Idioms
Pull: pull hard.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 34 of "the first time to make a surprise at the carving of a case", said: "all the zaoli people work together to drag down a delicate nun."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in human action. Example: "Yang Qi's life today is in the hands of you people. It's a drag." The third discount of Guan Hanqing's "moon worship Pavilion" in Yuan Dynasty: "in the meantime, I was dragged out of the business house by my Lord, and I was forced to walk on the carriage." The fifth chapter of Lao Can's travel notes: "several messengers dragged them down and pulled them down."
prone
read by the light of fireflies at the windows and the reflection of snow on the table - yíng chuāng xuě àn
hubs hit hubs and shoulders rub shoulders - gǔ jī jiān mó
rushing headlong into disaster - máng rén qí xiā mǎ