English | German | Russian | Czech

meander English

Meaning meander meaning

What does meander mean?

meander

(= wind, wander) to move or cause to move in a sinuous, spiral, or circular course the river winds through the hills the path meanders through the vineyards sometimes, the gout wanders through the entire body a bend or curve, as in a stream or river (= ramble) an aimless amble on a winding course

Synonyms meander synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as meander?

Topics meander topics

What do people use meander to talk about?

Conjugation meander conjugation

How do you conjugate meander?

meander · verb

Examples meander examples

How do I use meander in a sentence?

Movie subtitles

Sure. I tend to meander when I don't have, you know, a game plan.
You should probably just meander back there, take a look, see if he's back.
We can maybe tie that to the tuba player's lungs, and then somehow tie both those things to the construction worker's liver, and then possibly meander over to Frank's pancreatic failure. But nothing causes simultaneous brain and heart problems.
We cannot just meander.
We can meander around the issue for as long as each of us feels the situation requires us to for the sake of, oh.
While we meander towards key moments like deciding to have kids of some description.
Rivers meander through the landscape in a seemingly random way and if you just look at a few turns then they will be random.
This is the satellite picture of the bend in the river, the meander you can see here, and the mathematical relationship, the pattern that we're looking for, is this.
If I measure the wavelength of the meander, which is just the length between the point where the river starts to turn and meanders up and then meanders down and comes back again, you see it's around 11 centimetres on this map.
And then if I measure the width of the river at this point then it's something like one centimetre, so the ratio of the wave length of the meander to the width of the river, in this case, is about 11.
The meander of a river and a leopard's spots are just two examples of patterns in nature, but there are countless more.
You mean, did I meander by Winning's house and kill him?
I'm taking you and Sadie on a little meander.
Bigfoot, let's meander.
I'm going to meander down this way.
Minimal attention to each breast before I meander to your dander.
Tom: We can meander around the issue for as long as each of us feels the situation requires us to for the sake of, oh. Let's say, false propriety.
Next year the Meander will see a wheat tighter and thicker than this one.
We keep the bleeding head wrapping it in spikes and flowers and among songs and cheerfulness we throw it into the Meander.
She tends to constantly meander.
I would be Peavey Meander.
We can maybe tie that to the tuba player's lungs, and then somehow tie both those things to the construction worker's liver, and then possibly meander over to Frank's pancreatic failure.
I'm taking you and sadie on a little meander.

News and current affairs

If that is the future we want, we should stride toward it with full awareness and a sense of purpose, not meander carelessly until we fall into a hole, look up, and wonder how we got there.

Are you looking for...?