Word of the Day
for Tuesday,
August 27, 2013
Meander \mee-AN-der\, verb:
1. to proceed by or take a winding or indirect course: The stream meandered
through the valley.
2. to wander aimlessly; ramble: The talk meandered on.
3. Surveying. to define the margin of (a body of water) with a meander line.
2. to wander aimlessly; ramble: The talk meandered on.
3. Surveying. to define the margin of (a body of water) with a meander line.
noun:
1. Usually, meanders. turnings or windings; a winding path or course.
2. a circuitous movement or journey.
3. an intricate variety of fret or fretwork.
1. Usually, meanders. turnings or windings; a winding path or course.
2. a circuitous movement or journey.
3. an intricate variety of fret or fretwork.
I had forgotten about
muggers on our walk down the avenue, but as we meandered over toward
Broadway the street got darker and I became acutely conscious of all we had
read about them.
-- Larry McMurtry, Somebody's Darling, 1978
-- Larry McMurtry, Somebody's Darling, 1978
The rest of us climbed
the cliffs and hills, looked at entrenched meanders, terminal
moraines, glacial detritus, relief maps of the Delaware Water Gap, and
outcroppings of the Wissahickon Mica Schist.
-- Renata Adler, Speedboat, 1976
-- Renata Adler, Speedboat, 1976
The term meander
comes from the Greek Maiandros
which is the name of a winding river in Caria. The noun form entered English in
the 1500s, and the verb form shortly followed.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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