0 present participle of snake
1 to move along a route that includes a lot of twists or bends:
The river snakes through some of the most spectacular countryside in France.
In contrast, odorant stimuli possess both spatial and temporal character, snaking out complex plumes that can wander over a wide area.
Large-scale jet instability is likely t o be the underlying cause of the snaking which may well be a yet unobserved feature of air.
Snaking columns can have footnotes, handy if your club newsletter addresses a very pedantic membership.
The wall of housing was designed as a snaking band, rising and falling in relation to the land and the accommodation, with a general emphasis on unity of expression.
There was a railway line snaking over empty fields on which reposed abandoned railway trucks through which the bindweed grew profusely.
I stood behind the counters and saw the queues of people snaking through.
That is merely a counsel of despair; it is telling us that we must give up any idea of snaking any competition with our competitors.
I believe that the legislation is beginning to achieve its purpose of snaking consumers better aware of the cost of credit.