0 past simple and past 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.
Massive overhead ducting no longer provided any ventilation; pipes with equally obsolete functions snaked up and down the walls.
Such reorganisations meant that either children "snaked" through a town from one building to another, or staff did so in minibuses.
Also, these snaked runners are needed for some variable length/ split runner designs, and allow the size of the plenum to be reduced.
Oil caught fire and the fire snaked across the water before it extinguished itself.
A padded, serpentine bar snaked through the room's mirror, chrome and black leather decor.
There were many smaller walls that snaked through the city as well.
The most striking change was the swoopy four-into-one exhaust system that snaked around the frame, converging into a single muffler on the right side of the bike.
He snaked his way through and escaped.