look at a map.
To "meander" means "to follow a winding or bending path" - meandered is the past tense of this; "The river meandered towards Cambridge." (The river followed a winding path towards Cambridge.)
Meander means wind ( pronounced wined ). e.g. The river meandered through the valley. The river wound through the valley.
the snake meandered across the grass very slowly so the bird could not hear the snake slithering.
The stream meandered through the meadow. The boy meandered aimlessly on his way home. The path meandered through the woods.
They meandered off the trail.
serpentear -> to meander Serpenteo = I meander Serpenteando = meandering Serpenteas = You meander Serpentea = He/ She/ You (formal) meander(s) Serpenteamos = We meander Serpenteáis = You (plural) meander Serpentean= They/ you (plural, formal) meander
'Meandering' is to wander here and there, apparently aimlessly.
One example is meandered.
How is a meander different
How is a meander different
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
A meander is a bend or such like in a river