(1) Lose clarity or turn aside especially from the main subject of attention or course of argument in writing, thinking, or speaking
(2) Lose clarity or turn aside especially from the main subject of attention or course of argument in writing
(3) thinking
(4) or speaking
(1) Well, that seemed to be as good a target to divagate towards as any, so he set off for it.
(2) But here we'll take you on a tour to midmost of Tokyo by divagating the bike path.
(3) This divagation into the absurd was merely intended to show what film-criticism has least to fear from.
(4) Willpower he was not acquainted with, lest he would have divagated from his fated path long ago.
(5) It is through just such a divagation , he tells me, that his fictions begin.
(6) Psych influences are revealed in their lyrics: u2018His season in the Zensong there's a tiny smell of divagation , now.u2019
(7) If it sounds all over the place, it is, but because Brakes couch their divagations in directness and simplicity, it all hangs together.
(8) The first sentence, with unnecessary sub-clauses and other literary divagations , is less than Orwellian in its intent.
(9) Others have divagated at length on the accuracy of these particular statements, and I will leave that task to them.
(10) Datta divagates into revolutionary illusions, Indian u2018leftistu2019 illusions, and its infantile bid for power with violence tactically kept sheatheed.
stray
digress
wander