digress - meaning and definition. What is digress
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What (who) is digress - definition

SECTION OF A COMPOSITION OR SPEECH THAT MARKS A TEMPORARY SHIFT OF SUBJECT
Digress; Topic drift; Digressions

digress         
v. (D; intr.) to digress from
digress         
(digresses, digressing, digressed)
If you digress, you move away from the subject you are talking or writing about and talk or write about something different for a while.
I've digressed a little to explain the situation so far, so let me now recap...
She digressed from her prepared speech to pay tribute to the President.
VERB: V, V from n
digression (digressions)
The text is dotted with digressions.
N-VAR
digress         
v. n.
Wander, deviate or divergence or turn aside from one's main topic.

Wikipedia

Digression

Digression (parékbasis in Greek, egressio, digressio and excursion in Latin) is a section of a composition or speech that marks a temporary shift of subject; the digression ends when the writer or speaker returns to the main topic. Digressions can be used intentionally as a stylistic or rhetorical device.

In classical rhetoric since Corax of Syracuse, especially in Institutio Oratoria of Quintilian, the digression was a regular part of any oration or composition. After setting out the topic of a work and establishing the need for attention to be given, the speaker or author would digress to a seemingly disconnected subject before returning to a development of the composition's theme, a proof of its validity, and a conclusion. A schizothemia is a digression by means of a long reminiscence.

Cicero was a master of digression, particularly in his ability to shift from the specific question or issue at hand (the hypothesis) to the more general issue or question that it depended upon (the thesis). As was the case with most ancient orators, Cicero's apparent digression always turned out to bear directly upon the issue at hand. During the Second Sophistic (in Imperial Rome), the ability to guide a speech away from a stated theme and then back again with grace and skill came to be a mark of true eloquence.

Examples of use of digress
1. If you must digress into unrelated areas, make sure it‘s all right with the others present.
2. This is not the place to digress into a history of what subsequently happened.
3. But I digress ... Expert cutting, however, is a different kettle of poisson.
4. I want to digress a bit to discuss two important issues, each has a direct bearing on the tariff structure.
5. The court should digress from that only under special circumstances, in the name of the child‘s best interest.