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Meander   /miˈændər/   Listen
noun
Meander  n.  
1.
A winding, crooked, or involved course; as, the meanders of the veins and arteries. "While lingering rivers in meanders glide."
2.
A tortuous or intricate movement.
3.
(Arch.) Fretwork. See Fret.



verb
Meander  v. t.  To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous.



Meander  v. i.  (past & past part. meandered; pres. part. meandering)  To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate. "Five miles meandering with a mazy motion Through wood and dale the sacred river ran."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Meander" Quotes from Famous Books



... strokes of the oars accomplished, —and reached a very pleasant seclusion called "The Lovers' Walk." A ferriage of twopence pays for the transit across the river, and gives the freedom of these grounds, which are threaded with paths that meander and zigzag to the top of the precipitous ridge, amid trees and shrubbery, and the occasional ease of rustic seats. It is a sweet walk for lovers, and was so for us; although J——-, with his scramblings and disappearances, and shouts from above, and headlong scamperings ...
— Passages From the English Notebooks, Complete • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... muse, nae poet ever fand her, Till by himsel' he learn'd to wander, Adown some trottin' burn's meander, An' no think lang: O sweet to stray, an' ...
— Myths of Babylonia and Assyria • Donald A. Mackenzie

... the plains of Chili are not the residences of "glory and generous shame." But that poetry and virtue go always together is an opinion so pleasing that I can forgive him who resolves to think it true. The third stanza sounds big with "Delphi," and "AEgean," and "Ilissus," and "Meander," and "hallowed fountains," and "solemn sound;" but in all Gray's odes there is a kind of cumbrous splendour which we wish away. His position is at last false. In the time of Dante and Petrarch, from whom we derive our ...
— Lives of the Poets: Gay, Thomson, Young, and Others • Samuel Johnson

... forgetting to have breakfast that morning, he had made a pretty fair beginning. He was well on his way, had composed a roan-colored lyric of the ranges, discoursed on the subject of love, and had set his spirit free to meander in the realms of imagination. Yet his spirit swept back to him with a rush of wings and a question. Why not get married? And "Gee! Gosh!" he ejaculated, startled by the abruptness of the thought. "Now I like hosses and dogs and folks, but ...
— Sundown Slim • Henry Hubert Knibbs

... found at Heraclea in Lydia, and at Magnesium on the Meander or Magnesium at Sipylos, all in Asia Minor. It was called the "Heraclean Stone" by the people, but came at length to bear the name of "Magnet" after the city of Magnesia or the mythical shepherd Magnes, ...
— The Story Of Electricity • John Munro


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