digress - transcription, translation and pronunciation online

Transcription and pronunciation of the word "digress" in British and American variants. Detailed translation and examples.

digress
[daɪˈɡres]
[daɪˈɡres]
Definitions
verb
leave the main subject temporarily in speech or writing.
I have digressed a little from my original plan
Examples
The dispersed digressiveness of the Web as a medium provides a more inclusive spread of relevant topics, and thus enables a fuller, even more ‘coherent’ presentation of a subject.
Except for a few meandering authorial digressions , the novel maintains a cracking pace from start to finish.
He is also a world-champion digresser , sending out long skeins of words, which bend back and dissolve into the previous ones.
I'm digressing but the point is it wasn't hard to imagine a member of my family being a criminal; I was kind of getting used to it.
But I'm digressing , and meandering, and I apologise, unless you like that kind of thing, which I do when others do it, but I understand if you don't.
During the question-and-answer session that followed, a student asked, digressively , about the music curriculum in British universities.
The complexity and the digressiveness and the specificity and the resistance to abstraction or generalization, that's the art itself.
I know I digressed from the subject of the article.
Is his digressiveness in fact an organizational technique?
Whether digressively or directly, at a walk or at a run, the motion is on the ground and by foot, putting its weight part by part onto the terrain to be covered.