List of synonyms from "zeroes on" to synonyms from "zing"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms zillions, zilchest, zestless, zigzagged, zigzag and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « zigzagging »
- As in ramble : verb wander about; travel aimlessly
- As in stagger : verb walk falteringly
- As in totter : verb move falteringly
- As in turn : verb reverse; change course
- As in twist : verb curl, spin
- As in bend : verb form or cause a curve
- As in weave : verb blend, unite; contrive
- As in wiggle : verb shake back and forth
- As in wind : verb bend, turn
- As in wriggle : verb maneuver out of; wiggle
- As in yaw : verb temporarily swerve off coarse
- As in yaw : verb swerve
- As in refract : verb bend
- As in crook : verb bend, angle
- As in cross : verb traverse an area
- As in curl : verb bend, loop
- This zigzagging, or "tacking," as it is called, is illustrated in Fig. 141.
- Extract from : « Boys' Book of Model Boats » by Raymond Francis Yates
- Well, then, here we have been zigzagging about for a good hour, havent we?
- Extract from : « The Heart of the White Mountains, Their Legend and Scenery » by Samuel Adams Drake
- After zigzagging through the woods he had set off in a bee-line for the top of a cliff.
- Extract from : « Watched by Wild Animals » by Enos A. Mills
- It is reached by a stone stairway, zigzagging along the face of the rocks.
- Extract from : « Twenty Years in Europe » by Samuel H. M. Byers
- It would have been easy enough if I had been zigzagging according to Hoyle.
- Extract from : « Sea-Hounds » by Lewis R. Freeman
- It was their one hope, and by zigzagging from the creek to any semblance of a road, the entrance to the nook might be identified.
- Extract from : « Wells Brothers » by Andy Adams
- Soon they were zigzagging up the face of the Drakensberg—the loftiest and grandest mountain range in all South Africa.
- Extract from : « Our Little Boer Cousin » by Luna May Innes
- After zigzagging for awhile in rain, we come suddenly upon the Roman theatre, a sight to take one's breath away.
- Extract from : « The Roof of France » by Matilda Betham-Edwards
- Leaping, zigzagging to avoid the bullets aimed at them, they came on in the most determined manner.
- Extract from : « Haviland's Chum » by Bertram Mitford
- Despite the speed, the zigzagging course kept Dave opposite the troopship he had been guarding through the night.
- Extract from : « Dave Darrin and the German Submarines » by H. Irving Hancock