Meander vs Swerve - What's the difference?
meander | swerve |
A winding, crooked, or involved course.
* Sir R. Blackmore
A tortuous or intricate movement.
Fretwork.
(math) A self-avoiding closed curve which intersects a line a number of times.
To wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate.
To wind, turn, or twist; to make flexuous.
To stray; to wander; to rove.
* Sir Philip Sidney
To go out of a straight line; to deflect.
* Sir Philip Sidney
To wander from any line prescribed, or from a rule or duty; to depart from what is established by law, duty, custom, or the like; to deviate.
* Book of Common Prayer
* Clarendon
* Atterbury
To bend; to incline.
* Milton
To climb or move upward by winding or turning.
* Dryden
To turn aside or deviate to avoid impact.
of a projectile, to travel in a curved line
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=January 8
, author=Chris Bevan
, title=Arsenal 1 - 1 Leeds
, work=BBC
As verbs the difference between meander and swerve
is that meander is to wind or turn in a course or passage; to be intricate while swerve is to stray; to wander; to rove.As a noun meander
is a winding, crooked, or involved course.meander
English
Alternative forms
* (archaic)Noun
(wikipedia meander) (en noun)- the meanders of an old river, or of the veins and arteries in the body
- While lingering rivers in meanders glide.
Derived terms
* meander belt * meanderer * meandering * meanderian * meanderic * meanderiform * meanderine * meander line * meander loop * meandrous * meandryVerb
(en verb)- The stream meandered through the valley.
- (Dryton)
References
* The Chambers Dictionary (1998)Anagrams
* *swerve
English
Verb
(swerv)- A maid thitherward did run, / To catch her sparrow which from her did swerve .
- The point [of the sword] swerved .
- I swerve not from thy commandments.
- They swerve from the strict letter of the law.
- many who, through the contagion of evil example, swerve exceedingly from the rules of their holy religion
- The battle swerved .
- The tree was high; / Yet nimbly up from bough to bough I swerved .
citation, page= , passage=Snodgrass also saw a free-kick swerve just wide before Arsenal, with Walcott and Fabregas by now off the bench, turned their vastly superior possession into chances in the closing moments}}