


A handsome man, clean-shaven and thoughtful, in a Barbour jacket meandered along after them.The filaments themselves are forked at various places and often meander wildly.Yanto's mind was busy as he meandered slowly through the leafy lanes towards Purton.To his left ran a modest lane which meandered northward to several small villages.From Mission Peak, the trail meanders eastward into Sunol Park.Ari and I meandered around the shops in Innsbruck.The narrow trail began at the end of the campground and meandered alongside Lime Kiln Creek.The orbital motion of the earth provided a causal explanation for why the planets appeared to meander across the sky.3 ( also meander on ) TALK TO somebody if a conversation or piece of writing meanders on, it is too long and has no purpose or structure - meanderings noun his aimless meanderings through Europe - meander noun → See Verb table Examples from the Corpus meander 2 WALK to walk somewhere in a slow relaxed way rather than take the most direct way possible meander along/through etc Cows still meander through these villages. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Geography meander me‧an‧der / miˈændə $ -ər / verb 1 TURN if a river, stream, road etc meanders, it has a lot of bends rather than going in a straight line meander along/across/down etc The river meandered gently along the valley floor.
