This meeting is beginning to stray from the point.
会议开始偏离主题了。
3if your eyes stray, you begin to look at something else, usually without intending to 〔眼睛〕走神,看往别处
stray to/back/over etc
Her eyes strayed to the clock.
她的目光移到了钟上。
4.to start doing something that is wrong or immoral, when usually you do not do this 入歧途;犯错误;犯罪;堕落
Examples from the Corpus
stray• Do women instinctively want to find a mate and never stray?• It's still no guarantee that he won't stray.• An antimatteratom that strays and touches the containerwall would set off a chain-reaction annihilation.• I have perhaps strayed away from matters of industry.• They were allowed little opportunity to stray from their group.• But many other speakers and writersstray into the firing line.• Fowler may have been 25 yards out but you could see his antennaepick out Bennett straying off his line.• A number of Charles's men were killed because they had strayed out of formation.
stray into/onto/from• These shy creatures may sometimes be seen and have been known to stray on to the road, startling passing motorists.• For all his bold chivalry this watchful Celt seems surely to have strayed from a wayside pulpit.• At least 44 percent admit straying into another man's bed, the majority of them thirtysomething career women.• Getting a good education was paramount in my family ethos, and I should not stray from it, I decided.• Steinhardt strayed from pitch in the perky finale of K. 160; cellist David Soyer nibbled at notes.• Wisely, Vineria does not stray from proven success.• Red learned never to stray from the path or talk to strangers again.• His body was left to rot as a warning to others who might be tempted to stray from those paths of righteousness.