0 a line or pattern that looks like a Z or a row of Zs joined together:
1 a situation in which actions, plans, or ideas change suddenly and completely, and then change back again equally suddenly:
The Washington Post complained of "two weeks of policy zigzags".
The country seems to have been following a zigzag course between democracy and dictatorship.
3 to change suddenly and completely, and then change back again equally suddenly:
4 to move by going first in one direction and then in a different direction, and continuing in this way:
The winding streets were unpaved, lacked pavements, and zigzagged meaninglessly, often following the course of a stream.
Later, the collapsed vortex pair is distorted into irregular antisymmetric zigzags (figure 7c).
The growth of the zigzags does not saturate and finally layers of individual pancake dipoles are produced.
Behind the glass, blond desks floated on a creamy carpet with magenta zigzags.
He asked who was responsible for policing zigzags.
If we had that person in place now we would not have the zigzagging that goes on between the six-monthly presidencies.
Three of the businesses which have complained are located next to bus stops, on zigzags next to traffic signals—as they were before the red route was introduced.
The 3-dimensional architecture of chromatin in-situ - electron tomography reveals fibers composed of a continuously variable zigzag nucleosomal ribbon.
中文繁体
線條, 鋸齒形線條, 之字形…
More中文简体
线条, 锯齿形线条, 之字形…
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zigzag, zigzag [masculine, singular]…
MorePortuguês
ziguezague…
More日本語
ジグザグ…
MoreTürk dili
zikzak…
MoreFrançais
zigzag [masculine], zigzaguer, zigzag…
MoreCatalan
ziga-zaga…
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