define digress - Search
  1. Dictionary

    di·gress
    [dīˈɡres]
    verb
    digress (verb) · digresses (third person present) · digressed (past tense) · digressed (past participle) · digressing (present participle)
    1. leave the main subject temporarily in speech or writing:
      "I have digressed a little from my original plan"
    Origin
    early 16th century: from Latin digress- ‘stepped away’, from the verb digredi, from di- ‘aside’ + gradi ‘to walk’.
    Translate digress to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. leave the main subject temporarily in speech or writing:
      go off at a tangent
      turn aside
      get off the subject
      stray from the subject
      stray from the point
      deviate from the topic
      get sidetracked
      Opposite:
      keep/stick to the point
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  2. People also ask
    What is digress verb?Definition of digress verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary to start to talk about something that is not connected with the main point of what you are saying To digress for a moment, I would like to remind you that there will be no classes next week. Questions about grammar and vocabulary?
    What does it mean if you digress?If you digress, you move away from the subject you are talking or writing about and talk or write about something different for a while. [...] present simple: I digress, you digress [...] past simple: I digressed, you digressed [...] • wander, drift, stray, depart [...]
    What is a synonym for digress?If I can digress for a moment, I'd like to briefly mention her earlier films. How does the verb digress contrast with its synonyms? Some common synonyms of digress are depart, deviate, diverge, swerve, and veer. While all these words mean "to turn aside from a straight course," digress applies to a departing from the subject of one's discourse.
    Where does the word digress come from?The word digress has been around since the 16th century. It comes from a Latin root that literally means “to step away,” related to words like aggressive, gradient, and progress, but we digress. As early as 1530, digress was being used in its modern sense, “to go off topic in speech or writing.”
     
  3. (in speech or writing) to move away from the main subject and discuss something else: He digressed from his subject in order to criticize the accuracy of a newspaper story.
    dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/digress
    The meaning of DIGRESS is to turn aside especially from the main subject of attention or course of argument.
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/digress
    digress / (daɪˈɡrɛs) / verb(intr) to depart from the main subject in speech or writing to wander from one's path or main direction
    www.dictionary.com/browse/digress
    According to Merriam-Webster Unabridged English Dictionary and Cambridge Dictionary, the word digress (pronounced daɪˈɡrɛs) is an intransitive verb that means to move away or veer away from the current subject or topic of conversation or writing.
    thewordcounter.com/meaning-of-digress/
     
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