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1 digress
digress [daɪˈgres]• ... but I digress... mais je m'écarte du sujet* * *[daɪ'gres]intransitive verb faire une digression -
2 digress
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3 digress
digress [daɪ'gres]s'éloigner, s'écarter;∎ you're digressing from the subject vous vous éloignez du sujet;∎ but I digress mais je m'égare, revenons à nos moutons -
4 digress
(to wander from the point, or from the main subject in speaking or writing.) faire une digression -
5 branch
branch [brɑ:ntʃ]1 noun∎ the branches le branchage, les branches(b) (secondary part → of road) embranchement m; (→ of river) bras m; (→ of railway) bifurcation f, raccordement m; (→ of pipe) branchement m; (→ of candlestick, artery) branche f(c) (division → gen) division f, section f; (→ of family) ramification f, branche f; (→ of science) branche f; (→ of police force) antenne f; (→ of government, civil service) service m; Military (→ of armed forces) division f; Linguistics rameau m(d) Commerce (of company) agence f, succursale f, filiale f; (of shop) succursale f; (of bank) agence f, succursale f;∎ where's the nearest branch of Kookaï? où se trouve le Kookaï le plus proche?(b) (road, river) bifurquer►► branch banking banque f à réseau;Railways branch line ligne f secondaire;branch manager (of bank) directeur(trice) m,f d'agence; (of shop) directeur(trice) m,f de succursale;familiar branch water eau f plate□∎ a smaller path branches off to the left un chemin plus petit bifurque vers la gauche∎ I'd like to branch off from my main topic for a moment j'aimerais m'écarter un instant du sujet qui m'occupeétendre ses activités;∎ they're branching out into the restaurant business ils étendent leurs activités à ou se lancent dans la restauration;∎ I'm going to branch out on my own je vais faire cavalier seul
См. также в других словарях:
Digress — Di*gress , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Digressed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Digressing}.] [L. digressus, p. p. of digredi to go apart, to deviate; di = dis + gradi to step, walk. See {Grade}.] 1. To step or turn aside; to deviate; to swerve; especially, to turn … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Digress — Di*gress , n. Digression. [Obs.] Fuller. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
digress — I verb aberrare, alter course, be diffuse, branch out, change direction, depart, detour, deviate, digredi, divagate, divaricate, diverge, divert, drift, expatiate, fly off at a tangent, go astray, meander, ramble, rove, shift, sidestep, sidetrack … Law dictionary
digress — 1520s, from L. digressus, pp. of digredi to go aside, depart (see DIGRESSION (Cf. digression)), or perhaps a back formation from digression. Related: Digressed; digressing … Etymology dictionary
digress — deviate, diverge, depart, *swerve, veer Analogous words: *wander, stray … New Dictionary of Synonyms
digress — [v] stray, deviate aberrate, beat about the bush*, be diffuse, circumlocute, depart, divagate, drift, excurse, get off the point, get off the subject, get sidetracked, go by way of*, go off on a tangent*, long way*, meander, ramble, roam, swerve … New thesaurus
digress — ► VERB ▪ leave the main subject temporarily in speech or writing. DERIVATIVES digression noun digressive adjective. ORIGIN Latin digredi step away … English terms dictionary
digress — [di gres′, dīgres′] vi. [< L digressus, pp. of digredi, to go apart < dis , apart + gradi, to go, step: see GRADE] to turn aside; esp., to depart temporarily from the main subject in talking or writing; ramble SYN. DEVIATE … English World dictionary
digress — UK [daɪˈɡres] / US verb [intransitive] Word forms digress : present tense I/you/we/they digress he/she/it digresses present participle digressing past tense digressed past participle digressed if you digress from a subject, you start to talk or… … English dictionary
digress — v. (D; intr.) to digress from * * * [d(a)ɪ gres] (D; intr.) to digress from … Combinatory dictionary
digress — digresser, n. digressingly, adv. /di gres , duy /, v.i. 1. to deviate or wander away from the main topic or purpose in speaking or writing; depart from the principal line of argument, plot, study, etc. 2. Archaic. to turn aside. [1520 30; < L… … Universalium