0 past simple and past participle of navigate --
1 to direct the way that a ship, aircraft, etc. will travel, or to find a direction across, along, or over an area of water or land, often by using a map: --
Yet thinking through how displaced persons themselves navigated the myriad flows of power and how they understood the process of displacement remains the most challenging issue of all.
Women tortilla workers navigated between these political spaces to combat their increasing relegation to underpaid, insecure positions.
In each trial, the robot navigated from the start point (a variable position close to the author's desk) to a goal location.
The human operator was able to make them weave in and out of obstacles and navigated them over a course.
Multiple links may be navigated into the workspace and thus their movements are constrained by the obstacles.
Continuous neural dynamics is navigated, as a bird navigates wind currents, using small adjustments to get a large result.
It can be seen, then, that the path to empowerment of welfare service users cannot straightforwardly be navigated through the introduction of a radical intervention.
Figure 35 shows that the vehicle successfully navigated between waypoints and reached the goal location.