Digressing from subject to subject
Crossword Clue

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AnswerCrossword Clue
discursiveDigressing from subject to subject
ergativea. (in certain languages, as Basque, Eskimo, and some Caucasian languages) noting a case that indicates the subject of a transitive verb and is distinct from the case indicating the subject of an intransitive verb b. similar to such a case i
desultorydigressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random.
SEGUESubject-to-subject link
anywayTo change the subject or to resume a subject after interruption
sourcebooksA collection of writings and articles on a particular subject, esp. one used as a basic introduction to that subject
sourcebookA collection of writings and articles on a particular subject, esp. one used as a basic introduction to that subject
impersonal(of a verb) Used only with a formal subject (in English usually it) and expressing an action not attributable to a definite subject (as in it is snowing)
anecdotal(of the treatment of subject matter in representational art) pertaining to the relationship of figures or to the arrangement of elements in a scene so as to emphasize the story content of a subject
thankerto express gratitude to thanked her for the present used in the phrase thank you usually without a subject to politely express gratitude thank you for your consideration or sometimes to emphasize a preceding statement especially by implying that it is not subject to question likes her job just fine, thank you used in such phrases as thank God, thank goodness usually without a subject to express gratitude or more often only the speaker's or writer's pleasure or satisfaction in something
thankedto express gratitude to thanked her for the present used in the phrase thank you usually without a subject to politely express gratitude thank you for your consideration or sometimes to emphasize a preceding statement especially by implying that it is not subject to question likes her job just fine, thank you used in such phrases as thank God, thank goodness usually without a subject to express gratitude or more often only the speaker's or writer's pleasure or satisfaction in something