Divagación in english
Digression
pronunciation: daɪgreʃən part of speech: noun
pronunciation: daɪgreʃən part of speech: noun
In gestures
divagación = digression ; meandering ; wander ; rambling.
Example: If we instruct it to ponder this question more leisurely, it will quickly try the user's patience with digressions concerning the less illustrious senior MOZART, LEOPOLD.Example: Browsing when one has no clue what one wants is not a very intellectual activity, it is rather aimless meandering.Example: The article is entitled 'Memories of Otago and Southland libraries and librarians: an unmethodical wander'.Example: Finally -- after much rambling and digression -- we come to the point, and the point is simply this: use the tools you have.more:
» divagaciones = musings ; stray thoughts .
Example: Defoe's eighteenth century style full of tedious moralizing and philosophical musings, and not exactly well-stocked with dramatic excitements to relieve the steady pace, seemed not at all to put him off. Example: The title of the article is 'Some stray thoughts on Dewey Decimal Classification'.» lleno de divagaciones = meandering .
Example: Little did I know, but I was about to spend the next 11 hours of my life in a conference room, listening to a very meandering speaker.