There is no such river as the Darling-Murray River. They are two separate and distinct rivers which, together, make up the Murray-Darling river system. And yes, they certainly do meander, especially the Murray.
The Darling River joins the Murray River at Wentworth in far western New South Wales, not Victoria.
A meander is a bend or such like in a river
its called a meander
A bend in a river.
As a river deposits sediment on the inside of a meander and erodes the outside of the meander, the meander migrates toward the outside edge
River bends are called 'esses' or 'meanders'
A meander is a bend in the coarse of the water flow in a river. There is not a river recorded with the most meanders, although rivers with the most meanders are located in Africa.
It varies according to which meander you are referring to.
The word meander (from the Greek Maiandros) is the name of a river that was famous in antiquity for winding. Hence the word means "to behave like the Meander" that is to wind and turn like a river on a flat alluvial plain. Said loosely of any irregular itinerary.
A meander is a curve or bend in a stream or river.
Meander means wind ( pronounced wined ). e.g. The river meandered through the valley. The river wound through the valley.
Yes
the answer is meander