meander
81Meander — Me•an•der [[t]miˈæn dər[/t]] n. geg ancient name of the Menderes 1) …
82meander — me•an•der [[t]miˈæn dər[/t]] v. i. 1) to proceed by a winding or indirect course 2) to wander aimlessly; ramble 3) a winding path or course • Etymology: 1570–80; < L maeander < Gk maíandros a winding, generic use of Maíandros the Menderes… …
83meander — /miˈændə / (say mee anduh) verb (i) 1. to proceed by a winding course. 2. to wander aimlessly. –noun 3. (usually plural) a turning or winding; a winding path or course. 4. a loop like bend in a river with a cliff or bluff on one side and a gently …
84meander — I s ( n, meandrar) GEOG labyrintliknande bandornament II s ( n, meandrar) GEOG slingrande flod …
85meander — v. & n. v.intr. 1 wander at random. 2 (of a stream) wind about. n. 1 (in pl.) a the sinuous windings of a river. b winding paths. 2 a circuitous journey. 3 an ornamental pattern of lines winding in and out; a fret. Etymology: L maeander f. Gk… …
86meander line — Survey. a zigzag traverse made to define the approximate margin of a natural body of water. * * * …
87meander belt — A zone within which meandering of a stream occurs [16] …
88meander niche — A conical or crescent shaped opening in the wall of a cave, formed by the downward and lateral erosion of a stream on the floor of a passage [10] …
89Meander Falls — /miændə ˈfɔlz/ (say meeanduh fawlz) plural noun a waterfall in northern central Tasmania, on the Huntsman river. 180 m …
90meander belt — noun : the part of a valley bottom across which a stream shifts its channel from time to time especially in flood …