It digresses into long corridors of thought, quiet corners of droll humour. |
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With this film, Loach digresses from his usual gritty themes of social realism to pose questions of culture, race and religion. |
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Like any good curator, of course, he digresses, pausing to impart a bit of gossip or whimsy, spicing the historically significant with the genuinely weird. |
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But no, she digresses into a long dissertation on gun control and abortion, veritably begging the Democrats to adopt the position of the Republican Party. |
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However, the story line later digresses and becomes confusing and cryptic. |
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His dress borders on the flamboyant yet never digresses to gaudiness. |
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During these minutes it is as if there is something she wants to say, but daren't, so that her conversation digresses and falters. |
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In longer conversations, he often redirects the topic away from himself, then energetically digresses. |
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Buddy rambles, digresses, pontificates, and fails completely to make Seymour Glass seem a believable human being. |
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The author frequently digresses in his critiques of historical events, and thus is often repetitive. |
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The report digresses, describing the entire process of preparing for the 2000-2006 programme and detailing the characteristics of the new funds and new regulations. |
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His problem is that, sometimes, he digresses from the topic. |
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Sometimes Taana, digresses and excited with the information, proposed the mineral to other contactors who were standing tacitly behind her back, asking about their impressions. |
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Disease, physical and psychological, is a grim leitmotif of Secrest's book, which digresses often to describe times that were raddled with microbes and melancholy. |
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Asked a straight question, Gilgun digresses in a manner that you might think evasive or defensive, were his detours not so eye-poppingly forthright. |
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This makes her argument, which draws on many sources and often digresses into related subjects, difficult to follow at times. |
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