Antonyms for digress


Grammar : Verb
Spell : dih-gres, dahy-
Phonetic Transcription : dɪˈgrɛs, daɪ-


Definition of digress

Origin :
  • 1520s, from Latin digressus, past participle of digredi "to go aside, depart" (see digression), or perhaps a back-formation from digression. Related: Digressed; digressing.
  • verb stray, deviate
Example sentences :
  • Anthony Despeisses was a lawyer who used frequently to digress.
  • Extract from : « The Book-Hunter at Home » by P. B. M. Allan
  • I will digress a bit and explain how these stone-quarries were discovered.
  • Extract from : « Ten Books on Architecture » by Vitruvius
  • Just here let me digress a moment to erect a warning signboard.
  • Extract from : « How to Cook Husbands » by Elizabeth Strong Worthington
  • This is a digression I grant, but I cannot help it; it is the nature of man to digress.
  • Extract from : « Newton Forster » by Captain Frederick Marryat
  • Let us digress and note the happy return of this man to English soil.
  • Extract from : « Old Taverns of New York » by William Harrison Bayles
  • But, not to digress, what a "mess" people generally make of holiday presents!
  • Extract from : « Ginger-Snaps » by Fanny Fern
  • Here we must, for a moment or two, however unwillingly, digress.
  • Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol. 70, No. 434, December, 1851 » by Various
  • Just here we must digress for a moment to consider the status of bleeding.
  • Extract from : « An Epitome of the History of Medicine » by Roswell Park
  • You will not care to hear about that, though, so I will not digress.
  • Extract from : « A Dreadful Temptation » by Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller
  • Perhaps we should digress for a moment to say that there are chemically a number of sugars.
  • Extract from : « Physiology » by Ernest G. Martin

Synonyms for digress

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019