It, " errs when interpretation digresses into imitation _ and there were many accusations of mimicry this season, " as Anne Slowey writes in Elle.
32.
Chapter I . 6 digresses from the narrative in order to present the main and minor characters in more detail, in the form of twelve riddles and answers.
33.
Meanwhile, Carey's own narrative digresses into history and anecdote, touching on Sydney's uneasy race relations and a horrific recurring dream involving the squat.
34.
As one sharing space with Hercules and other strapping deities, the goddess has learned not to poke fun at Arnold's expense . . . but she digresses.
35.
But rather than charting his inner struggle with cancer, the film digresses into a mildly absurd tale of a man trying every medical means available to stop an unscratchable itch.
36.
The president digresses and wavers . . . She's a lawyer _ she starts at point a, b, c, d, e equals f ."
37.
The personal-biography section of Bush's Web site digresses to mention, " Governor and Mrs . Bush have worked hard to protect their daughters'privacy.
38.
A conversation with the actor, whose low voice seems to rumble from the center of his chest, takes a freewheeling philosophical path as he digresses on subjects of interest.
39.
Protagoras answers the second but avoids engaging in dialogue and digresses into a rhetoric which does not answer the question sufficiently but still manages to arouse the excitement of their young public.
40.
But it is an uneven performance by this playwright ( who also directed ), with a meandering narrative that digresses often and with too many bland bridges of dialogue between genuine zingers.