weave through (something)
weave through (something)
To pass through a dense group by moving deftly in between the people or things within. He wove through the crowd of people to avoid the police officer. We had to weave through the forest as we ran back to camp. I felt certain the motorcycle was going to crash, judging by how dangerously it was weaving through traffic.
See also: through, weave
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
weave through something
to move through something by turning and dodging. The car wove through traffic, almost hitting a number of other cars. We wove through the jungle vines, trying to avoid touching the poisonous ones.
See also: through, weave
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- a couple of (people or things)
- couple
- couple of
- big and bold
- force of numbers
- come from far and wide
- along the beaten track
- beaten
- chief
- (there are) too many chiefs and not enough Indians