0 present participle of swerve --
1 to change direction, especially suddenly: --
Certainly, or in swerving away from the pedestrian.
I saw lorries swerving to miss the children.
The second course is for the gas boards to slow down their move away from coal without swerving from their path towards greater technical efficiency.
If they are full of potholes, cyclists will be swerving to avoid the bumps and there will be accidents.
One could take the case, for example, of a man driving in a lot of traffic and swerving between two lanes at high speed.
It was said at the inquest that the driver, who was 64, lost control, swerving his vehicle through a 180 degree turn.
It is inevitable that a dog or a cat or other pet rushing across the road causes braking, swerving, accidents and damage.
Part of the reason for the swerving and skidding is the ambiguity over the medium-term financial strategy.