英:[daɪˈɡres]
美:[daɪˈɡres]
英:[daɪˈɡres]
美:[daɪˈɡres]
di·gress
daI gres
第三人称单数:digresses
现在分词:digressing
过去式:digressed
过去分词:digressed
digressingly (adv.)
词根:digress
adj.digressive 枝节的;离题的
n.digression 离题;脱轨
Verb
1. lose clarity or turn aside especially from the main subject of attention or course of argument in writing, thinking, or speaking;
"She always digresses when telling a story"
"her mind wanders"
"Don't digress when you give a lecture"
2. wander from a direct or straight course
"偏离直接或指定的路线在说话或写作中转移",1520年代,源自拉丁语 digredi 的过去分词 digressus,意为“离开,偏离,背离”,由 dis- “分开,离开”(见 dis-)和 gradi “迈步,走”(源自 PIE 词根 *ghredh- “步行,走”)组成。或者它可能是从 digression 中反推出来的。相关词汇: Digressed; digressing。
Latin digressus, past participle of digredi, from dis- + gradi to step — more at grade >entry 1
The first known use of digress was in 1529
dilateverb
to make or grow larger or wider
lungs dilated with air
dilapidatedadjective
partly ruined or decayed especially from age or lack of care
a dilapidated old house
dike1 of 2noun
a channel dug in the earth to carry water : ditch
a bank of earth constructed to control water : levee
a long body of igneous rock that has been forced while molten into a narrow opening or crack
dike2 of 2verb
to surround or protect with a dike
to drain by a dike
dike1 of 2noun
a channel dug in the earth to carry water : ditch
a bank of earth constructed to control water : levee
a long body of igneous rock that has been forced while molten into a narrow opening or crack
dike2 of 2verb
to surround or protect with a dike
to drain by a dike
dinosaurnoun
any of a group of extinct often very large mostly land-dwelling long-tailed reptiles of the Mesozoic era
dihybrid1 of 2noun
an individual that is hybrid with respect to two different traits or pairs of genes
dihybrid2 of 2adjective
being, involving, or producing individuals that are hybrid with respect to two different traits or pairs of genes
dig1 of 2verb
to turn up the soil (as with a spade or hoe)
to hollow out or form by removing earth
dig a hole
to uncover or search by or as if by turning up earth dig for gold dig through books for help
dig potatoes
find out
dig up the facts
prod entry 1 sense 1, poke
dug me in the ribs
to pay attention to : notice
dig that hat
understand sense 1a
you dig me?
like entry 1 sense 1
I dig music
dig2 of 2noun
poke entry 3, thrust
a harsh remark : gibe
a place where scientists (as archaeologists or paleontologists) try to recover buried objects by diggingalso: the process of digging for such objects
digressverb
to turn aside especially from the main subject in writing or speaking
1 The fascinating conversation between Dr. Patalon, the philosophy enthusiast physician and the rather nontraditional economist digressed in unexpected directions but concluded with an interesting note.
2 The boss likes giving lectures, but every time he talks he tends to digress.
那个老板爱去前面演讲,但是每次都跑题。
3 Trump trial 'not a political rally': judge Trump’s two civil cases featured judges chiding the former president for speaking out of turn or digressing in his responses, while Trump bridles against restrictions.
4 Don't digress ( from the subject ) when lecturing.
讲课时不要岔开 ( 主题 ).
5 If I can digress for a moment, I'd like to briefly mention her earlier films.
6 They digress at every turn and, to add weight at the back end, they have appended nearly 50 ngram searches.
7 I'll tell you a funny story, if I digress from my subject for a monent.
如果允许我离题一会儿,我就给你们讲个有趣的故事.
8 We shall not digress into the history of methanics.
我们不去深考力学的历史.
9 Don't digress when you give a lecture.
你讲课时不要跑题.
10 Please allow me to digress for some time.
请允许我花点时间说些离题的话。
11 Don't digress from the subject when lecturing.
讲课时不要扯到枝节上。
12 This willingness to digress, to operate in territory that shares a border with fiction, does not meet with universal approval.
13 Critic Herbert Mitgang wrote in the New York Times, “The truest and shortest sentence in the novel reads: ‘I digress.’
14 It's lamentable. But I digress.
的可悲,但我偏离。
15 Now that I’ve digressed, I want to make sure my original point doesn’t get lost: Neither of you has to provide the other with a detailed inventory of everyone you’ve ever dated and why.
16 Don't wander from the subject: stick to the point , ie Don't digress.
不要离题, 要针对这一问题谈.
17 Don't digress from the subject when lecturing.
讲课时不要扯到枝节上。
18 This all contributes to amusing enough stories, but there are insurmountable problems: a habit of digressing at ridiculous length; gags that don't work too well in bald print; and quite unbearable smugness.
19 Coleridge, of course, who happily called himself a … lover of parentheses, does not bridle himself, but merely produces digressions about how he should not digress.
20 In Sterne, he discovered a mantra: “I progress as I digress.”
1 离题
cold tangential digressive excursive irrelevantly discursively digressively aside sidetrack digression divagation discursion impertinency wander stray divagate off the point away from the point off the mark off the track diverge from beside the point excursion tangent drift wandering inconsequential discursive afield irrelevance deviate beside the question travel out of the record deviation detour excursus be beside the point get off the track off topic be off the mark get away from impertinent divergence impertinence trail