[
UK
/miːˈændəɹɪŋ/
]
[ US /miˈændɝɪŋ/ ]
[ US /miˈændɝɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
of a path e.g.
a winding country road
rambling forest paths
the river followed its wandering course
meandering streams
How To Use meandering In A Sentence
- The first is the back-and-forth meandering pattern known as boustrophedon.
- This ‘meandering’ of the electrons makes them more likely to hit an atom of the metal, and the resistance is therefore increased: And the Physics Nobel Prize goes to… « Skulls in the Stars
- This changeable weather across the country was down to the meandering track of the jet stream. Times, Sunday Times
- Minus the film interaction, however, the opus suffered from overwrought verbiage and meandering vignettes.
- The centerpiece of Cumbler's story is the meandering Connecticut River, stretching from the border with Canada to the Atlantic Ocean.
- In the tradition of isolated rural buildings, the house is conceived as a singular gesture responding to the strength of the site: a grassy terrace overlooking a meandering river facing north up a spectacular valley, next to an old eucalypt. Bluff Farm House by Richard Cole Architecture
- For example, the title track's obscured by excessive meandering, never giving any indication of the song's center, or the composition's significance.
- The problem most of the reviews expose is Erikson's verbosity and a very slow and meandering buildup with many subplots leading nowhere, but the reader's patience is ultimatelly paid of by another bombastic ending (yup, a convergence). Archive 2008-07-01
- But he quickly went back into his shell, meandering around aimlessly in midfield. The Sun
- Though they were now only 65 air miles from their destination, the great salt lake lay more than 200 miles down the meandering river, through bands of belligerent nomads, wild rapids and a sun that threatened to "carbonize those who should be unprotected from its fierceness. Old Salt, Dead Sea