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straight, curved, zigzag, and bent.
Any shape at all - other than a straight line. It could be a smooth curve, or a zigzag or a set of disconnected bits - whatever.
Zigzag
a zigzag line
Ewan koi
Assuming there are no obstacles a straight line is of course always faster.
zigzag to have better move avoiding direct contact fire and maintaining distance between units. Straight line less mobility of movement
Zigzag. US Map to prove (check the link). And an image (check the link).
straight, curved, zigzag, and bent.
There can be a combination of the two - a line that is straight for a while and then curved, or a zigzag.
# Set pattern indicator to M (zigzag)# Set stitch length to 1 - 4 # Set zigzag width to '0' (zero) # Use straight or zigzag foot # Use straight or zigzag needle plate # Set needle position to 'M'(middle) # Feed dogs UP Good luck!
A zigzag road is mapped on Google earth or Google maps as a straight line unless zoomed very closely
Straight, bent, curved, zigzag. (Sin, cos, tan, and summin' I forget.)
A sentence that has a zigzag underneath it in Word means that there is a grammatical or spelling error. The grammar error is colored in green and the spelling error in red.
It's the past tense of the verb "to zigzag." It means a pattern that veers to the left, and then veers to the right, rather than going in a straight line: Trying to avoid being tackled, he zigzagged as he ran down the field. Depending on how it's used, the word "zigzag" can also be an adjective-- the mouse ran in a zigzag pattern because it was trying to get away from the cat. "Zigzag" came into the English language in the late 1700s, from French and German.
zigzag, windy, twisting, turning, meandering, snake, sinuous
horizontal, oblique, wavy, curve, vertical, zigzag, broken, angular, straight, dotted