Weave in and out
Move by twisting and turning or winding in and out, as in The motorcycle wove in and out of traffic, leaving us far behind. This expression is a redundancy, since weave literally means “intertwine strands of thread.”
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- Weaver
noun 1. a person who weaves. 2. a person whose occupation is weaving. 3. a weaverbird. noun 1. James Baird, 1833–1912, U.S. politician: congressman 1879–81, 1885–89. 2. Robert Clifton, 1907–97, U.S. economist and government official: first Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, 1966–68. noun 1. a person who weaves, esp as a means of livelihood […]
- Weaverbird
noun 1. any of numerous African and Asian finchlike birds of the family Ploceidae, noted for their elaborately woven nests and colonial habits. noun 1. any small Old World passerine songbird of the chiefly African family Ploceidae, having a short thick bill and a dull plumage and building covered nests: includes the house sparrow and […]
- Weavers-knot
noun 1. a knot made between two ropes by forming a bight in one and passing the end of the other through the bight, around it, and under itself. weaver’s hitch noun 1. sheet bend. weaver’s hitch noun 1. another name for sheet bend noun 1. a knot used esp for joining ropes of different […]
- Weaving
verb (used with object), wove or especially for 5, weaved; woven or wove; weaving. 1. to interlace (threads, yarns, strips, fibrous material, etc.) so as to form a fabric or material. 2. to form by interlacing threads, yarns, strands, or strips of some material: to weave a basket; to weave cloth. 3. to form by […]
- Web
noun 1. something formed by or as if by weaving or interweaving. 2. a thin, silken material spun by spiders and the larvae of some insects, as the webworms and tent caterpillars; cobweb. 3. Textiles. a woven fabric, especially a whole piece of cloth in the course of being woven or after it comes from […]