digression in English

noun
1
a temporary departure from the main subject in speech or writing.
let's return to the main topic after that brief digression

Use "digression" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "digression" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "digression", or refer to the context using the word "digression" in the English Dictionary.

1. All right, enough digression.

2. So much for digression.

3. All this is a digression.

4. Digression 13 : With what nature are we raised?

5. I must here introduce a short digression.

6. Now let's return from this digression to our subject.

7. This digression added to the liveliness of her talk.

8. A diversion or deviation from a main topic a digression.

9. At this moment, thoughts of Celia were a digression.

10. Please leave the digression, and get down to the business matter.

11. By my rambling digression , I perceive myself to be grown old.

12. And first I must say why I need to make this digression.

13. The wreck was caused by the digression of the two ships.

14. The plots of William Gaddis's novels allow ample opportunity for philosophical, theological, and society digression.

15. The audience cried the speaker down as soon as he started on a third digression.

16. The following paragraphs are a necessary digression to define and illustrate several important vector operations.

17. Synonyms for Bypath include detour, diversion, deviation, bypass, byway, deflection, departure, digression, divagation and divergence

18. Try to sort out the basic principles from what is simply illustrative detail and digression.

19. Talking about money now would be a digression from the main purpose of this meeting.

20. The reason for this is interesting, and worth a digression because it provides a good genetic analogy.

21. Counterparts tabs, chords, guitar, bass, ukulele chords, power tabs and guitar pro tabs including digression, collapse, prophets, slave, rope

22. There I was, clerking for Justice O'Connor, and I was haunted by a feeling that it was all a digression.

23. All of this may seem a digression from what this article set out to be: an inquiry into the sublime.

24. Even the digression up to Cajamarca now seemed in retrospect more like an adventure than something to send shivers down the spine.

25. In his book The World of the Talmud, Morris Adler comments: “A wise teacher would interrupt a lengthy and difficult legal argument with a digression of a less taxing and more edifying nature. . . .

26. And if you look at any of the books, you'll see this method of digression, even in Huck Finn — basically it's a trip with digressions, strung off it like beads, beads on a string.

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28. ‘In ancient Greek rhetoric, the Aposiopesis occasionally takes the form of a pause before a change of subject or a digression.’ ‘The first sentence is a continuation of the Aposiopesis in the previous paragraph - the answer to the unspoken question, ‘What did you think about?’’

29. ‘In ancient Greek rhetoric, the Aposiopesis occasionally takes the form of a pause before a change of subject or a digression.’ ‘The first sentence is a continuation of the Aposiopesis in the previous paragraph - the answer to the unspoken question, ‘What did you think about?’’

30. This short digression offered him the opportunity to follow the microbiological literature and to be aware of the important discoveries in the field, particularly work carried out by the Pasteur school in Paris during the decade 1882 to 1892 concerning the `chemotactic Ameboidism' of leukocytes (see in Elie Metchnikoff, 1892).