Swerving/weaving through traffic, cutting up, or swimming
itcheynessā¢
Illinois Standard.
RichCorinthianā¢
Swerving or weaving or cutting through traffic.
"**What** would you call **this** type", by the way.
honkokuā¢
Weaving in and out of lanes
QuercusSambucusā¢
I've call this "weaving in and out of traffic".
Hoon seems to be an Australian term for a bad driver; I've never heard of it until your post.
Reader124-Loganā¢
In Georgia, USA, Iād call it āweaving in trafficā or āweaving in and outā. The ticket-able offense is called āreckless drivingā.
General_Katydid_512ā¢
āCheckersā is so clever, I think I might have to start saying that
DemythologizedDieā¢
That's lane-hopping.
MakePhilosophy42ā¢
"Swerving between lanes" [of traffic/cars]
ur-finally-awakeā¢
There is (i think) a new term called "swimming" or "lane swimming". It is definitely a highly illegal and more dangerous version of what you're showing here. People are correct with "weaving" as a general purpose word.
DustyMan818ā¢
weaving through traffic. a more vulgar way to say it is "driving like an asshole"
CaptainFuzzyBootzā¢
Reckless driving; swerving between lanes; weaving in and out of traffic; being an asshole
Evil_Weevillā¢
Weaving through traffic
Weaving through lanes.
Commercial-Ad90ā¢
Thereās an irresponsible sub culture online that post videos of themselves driving like this. They call it āswimmingā
Most people call it āweaving through trafficā
ThirdSunRisingā¢
We old folks call it weaving. Some younger folks call it cutting.
SkyBSā¢
Weaving
Sailingswag123ā¢
Zigzagging
KatVanWallā¢
In England we call it āshit drivingā
platypuss1871ā¢
Weaving
IceMain9074ā¢
Nissan Altima activities
gingersassyā¢
I call it "bobbing and weaving [through traffic]"
Feldewā¢
You can also call it āthreading the needleā because thereās such a small margin for success in the execution.
Big_Consideration493ā¢
Road hog? Zig zag going in and out of traffic, tail gating,( too close behind ,)cutting people up( overtaking and pulling back in too close)
Middcoreā¢
"How would you describe" or "What would you call," not "How would you call."
JamesTiberiousā¢
UK driver here.
Iād call it weaving or lane-hopping.
However, there is a nuance here - if the road isnāt as densely packed as the illustration suggests, it could just be considered as being in the appropriate lane and accidentally undertaking other drivers who are hogging the wrong lanes.
larsloveslegosā¢
Swimming, floating, being a menace to society
tomalatorā¢
Weaving in and out of traffic
Or
Weaving through traffic
jibsandā¢
I think the word you're looking for is "cutting" if you type traffic cutting in youtube you'll find videos of people driving like this.
In the street racing community you'll hear "swimming" but those guys are straight up racing so it's a little more specific and a lot more aggressive.
Background_Support84ā¢
Checkers (similar to jumps made in the game)
Flam1ng1cecreamā¢
I would call this "braiding traffic".
Myrkur13ā¢
As an American, cutting people off
As a Mainer, "another fuckin masshole" š¤£
AcceptableCrab4545ā¢
cutting
LaPetitFleuretā¢
In Atlanta and urban NC Iāve heard it called ācutting upā
Rude_Bother_332ā¢
In New York we say cutting up
Marble-Boyā¢
When the road gets tedious... go full Colin McRae
wann_bubatz_egalā¢
BMWing /s
e_molgaā¢
Italian driving style
Cream_Filled_Melonā¢
Havenāt seen it yet here but Iāve heard it called ācutting upā in traffic
AgnosticAbeā¢
Swimming
Cutting up traffic
Weaving in and out of traffic
brxcerā¢
gen z would refer to this at "cutting up"
Arctic_Gnome_YZFā¢
Passing on the right.
UnknownFactoryEnesā¢
I know what to call the driver.
somefknkhtorsmthā¢
"Cutting up"- ŃŠ°Š¼Š¾Šµ Š±Š»ŠøŠ·ŠŗŠ¾Šµ Šŗ "ŃŠ°ŃŠŗŠ¾Š²Š°ŃŃ", Š±Š¾Š»ŠµŠµ ŃŠ»ŠµŠ½Š³Š¾Š²ŃŠ¹ ŃŠµŃŠ¼ŠøŠ½, ŃŠ°Šŗ Š¶Šµ ŠøŠ½Š¾Š³Š“Š° ŠøŃŠæŠ¾Š»ŃŠ·ŃŠµŃŃŃ "Swimming" ŠøŠ»Šø "Swimming through Traffic"
ŠŃŠøŠ¼ŠµŃŃ:
Have you seen that F90 and 205 cutting up on I-95?
Hey, I just got a full tank of gas, let's cut up in my RS4!
psyduck-00939ā¢
In South Korea, we said it āģ¹¼ģ¹źø°ā. It looks like a swinging knife.
tanya6kā¢
Aggressive lane changing.Ā
3body_Games1ā¢
Younger people and especially those who drive like this, may call this "cutting" or "cutting up" or "swimming"
Gravbarā¢
"Weaving through lanes"
weaving because of the motion the string makes when you weave string
Midnight_Lighthouse_ā¢
I'd call it Taxi Gone Wild
aDrunkenErrorā¢
I call it āDriving in Detroit with Ontario and Ohio drivers on the roadā
JonBartBeckā¢
Redlining
Distinct_Feed_5891ā¢
weaving in and out of traffic
zenigatamondattaā¢
Fun
Spare-Error8684ā¢
Weaving/cutting through traffic is the most common way to describe it.
HermaeusMoraahā¢
Weaving through traffic
Whowouldvethoughtā¢
Cutting someone off
___daddy69___ā¢
Weaving
Guilty-Character-612ā¢
In chinese it is called S shape driving lol or snake style?
Strong-Way-4416ā¢
I call it āBoy Raceringā. But that is idiolect.
Joey_Bats_420ā¢
Threading the needle
Jagmod770ā¢
I call or most Americans call it cutting up
clay-teethā¢
A technical word is careening, used like "they were careening in and out of traffic". I don't think the US has a slang term for it.
DemonaDracheā¢
"Weaving in and out of traffic"
There is no single word term for this type of driving. Swerving can be used in place of weaving, but you have to specify the in and out of traffic. There may be words elsewhere but this is used in the US.
AENEAS_Hā¢
Most people would call it weaving i think, but my family calls it cowboy driving
dfelton912ā¢
American here. I call this my style of driving
Tola76ā¢
Toronto.
blaciaā¢
A Darwin award contestant.
Klutzy-Buffalo9817ā¢
Being reckless while doing it is called ācutting upā and being smooth and not being as reckless is called āswimmingā
kawaiieshaā¢
Iāve almost exclusively heard these drivers being called a āJabroniā
General_Ginger531ā¢
"Organ Donor". Because when you get your driver's license, you can opt in to the organ donor program, and that means if you need an organ you will be higher on the list than people without it, in exchange for when you die they will try to preserve your organs for use in other people.
Those who drive like that are planning to meet their commitment on that far sooner than the rest of us.
Exact-Kitchen4436ā¢
Cutting up
DailyTreePlantingā¢
when done well: weaving, swimming, cutting up, traffic surfing.
If someone is obviously not a skilled driver and is attempting actual dangerous maneuvers then it would just be swerving
Spook404ā¢
owe a lot of insurance speedrun any%
Adventurous_Fix9315ā¢
BMW
DudeWithRootBeerā¢
1) An idiot.
2) Still an idiot.
DharmaCubā¢
I have never heard the word hoon in my life.
Gomer_Schmuckatelliā¢
Irresponsible and aggressive
Vegetable_Image3484ā¢
I call that "weaving through traffic"
shyguyJā¢
I call it ādriving like a Colombianā
ResearcherStandard80ā¢
Ohio
xxrancid13xxā¢
"Lane jockey" though it's been a long time since I've heard it used I see it happen about every day here in Cali
Standard_Pack_1076ā¢
Dangerous driving
permaburner69420ā¢
In California we call it swimming (usually only if talking positively about the activity)
MilkandHoney_XXXā¢
In Australia we call it ādriving like a stupid cuntā.
romin0ā¢
Trafic surfing
LogRollChampā¢
Too fast, too furious
m1n1crusherā¢
Thereās an internet slang term used nowadays between teenagers in the United States. Itās referred to as ācutting upā traffic, but this is specifically when doing it at extremely high speeds for the adrenaline rush as if it were a video game, not just changing lanes to be an ass
Corisstoā¢
Bmw
Open_Philosophy_7221ā¢
"what would you call it"Ā
Because you're looking for the correct noun to describe this type of driving, you need to ask "what".
We would say that that driver is weaving in and out of traffic.
Cheryl_Canningā¢
Aggressive driving
haus11ā¢
I like checkers, thatās a great description.
Iād call that line is weaving, however I also see left lane camping, tailgating, driving in blind spots. The guy driving the red line is at least probably paying attention to what heās doing.
sir_terranciumā¢
This is called get off your phone in the left lane/ I hate Teslas in the left lane because you have eMPG and your cruise control is too damn good
4011isbananasā¢
"There go the Californians"
Bearbearbluesā¢
āRecklessly weaving through trafficā or ārecklessly weaving in and out of traffic.ā It is a type of āreckless driving.ā
You might also saying ācutting people off.ā
More casuallyā¦ādriving like an a__holeā (not sure if I can use curse words here. Hopefully you can fill in the blanks) is very commonly what people say if you are talking amongst adults in a place you can use curse words. Or ājerkā if somewhere you shouldnāt say curse words. If you are telling a story to friends you might say something like, āAnd here comes this jerk, weaving in and out of traffic; cutting people off. He could have killed someone.ā
(For geographic context, Iām American.)
Polytongueā¢
In South African English we call this person a āpoesā.
Cereal-is-not-soupā¢
Iād say āhelloooā with one flattened hand horizontal in the air. Thatās how Iād call it.
NickTheThickā¢
cutting
JACR1335ā¢
Swerving
scixlovesuā¢
Reminds me of an old joke from the Flintstones:
>
Poor guy \[bus driver\] is about as punchy as they come.
They had to retire him after his first week.
Caught him weaving in heavy traffic.
He wasn't moving. He was just sitting in his bus, weaving.
Oleander_the_faeā¢
Illegal here. Weaving is against Colorado law now
ASD-RNā¢
I'm in Canada and have heard it called "zigzaging through traffic"
ImpossibleInsect7666ā¢
lane splitting
Kobihā¢
stupid ass driving
Left-Cod-9757ā¢
swimming/cutting up
Ihcendā¢
in gen z(american) slang it is known as "cutting up". As you cut people off and weave in and of traffic.
throwaway464391ā¢
lane switchin wit the paint drippin
IndecisiveEnthusiastā¢
If everyone is doing the same speed in all 3 lanes, im not sure,
maybe efficency? /s
GiantSweetTVā¢
Wouldn't have to do this if the MFers weren't going the speed limit in the left lane.
Foggy_Bluesā¢
I'm happy to learn it's called "checkers" in Russian, thank you
Fourstrokeperroā¢
In India we just call this driving
Darky083ā¢
I call this move "Romanian with BMW in leasing"
G-St-Wiiā¢
Don't be a weaver beaver.
Sock0kā¢
I would say āhoonā is outdated australasian slang. My dad said it in NZ but I donāt use it.
I would agree with āweaving through trafficā being a good phrase that hopefully most people would understand. Driving (and driving dangerously on the motorway) is too recent for there to be any solid consensus in different varieties of English around the globe.
darth_kupiā¢
Burnout 3 style. Thankfully its not Burnout 4 style...
MarkusJohnusā¢
Cutting up
Old_Exchange_1678ā¢
Driving Erratically
Leading_Atti2deā¢
In Albuquerque, NM specifically; you would be just fine calling this ādrivingā
razorrayrobinsonā¢
Getting skinny
itsbuckaroobanzaiā¢
āWeaving in and out of trafficā is correct (USA). Another good set of terms is āundertakingā and āovertakingā. Going around those first few cars by moving into the 3rd lane (the āslow laneā) is called undertaking, and itās dangerous, frowned upon, and in some places illegal. Overtaking is the opposite: passing someone via a faster lane (on their leftā¦or on their right if you are driving in the UK etc)
EmptyPondā¢
braindead
OkithaPROGZā¢
**Swimming.**
Its like a whole damn sport basically, there are skill levels. Bikers participate mostly too.
chekkytyke082ā¢
Iād call that an Audi driver
Stupid_Bitch_02ā¢
"That's how ya end up wrapped around a tree"
throwthrowawaytimeā¢
I call it "Sonuvabitch"
bill_tonggā¢
In British English I'd say either weaving through traffic or swerving through traffic. Weaving gives a sense of the manoeuvre being slower, more controlled or less dangerous than swerving.
Liwi808ā¢
Weavin' Stevens.
SinaRexyā¢
I think it's called lane splitting? Or filtering?
D-Train0000ā¢
California style
joined_under_duressā¢
In Australia, yeah, you'd call it hoon driving.
In the UK you'd just call it shit driving, reckless driving, bad driving, etc. Of course, if you saw this and the driver was driving a Mercedes, BMW or Audi you might well simply joke, "Typical XXXXX driver," although no direct shade is intended to any of you considerate Merc/BMW/Audi drivers.
It's possible (I'm afraid) that the fact you have a specific term for it in Russian means that you have a wilder, more reckless driving situation over there. You simply don't see driving like this on a UK motorway enough for it to have a specific term.
Szafomekā¢
Vietnamese average driver
odd_coinā¢
THATS JUST CRAZY ššš
Upstairs_Office_5446ā¢
I am from Germany and i would call it "drƤngeln"
katand97ā¢
Cab driver core
PriceZealousideal943ā¢
Weaving is appropriate, but I've heard it called "flossing". To a non native speaker that's probably confusing. Consider it slang.
FriendlyToad88ā¢
Depends on where youāre from, in parts of the US we call it ācutting upā I canāt speak for Canada, England, or anywhere else though.
ElectricalOne9140ā¢
I was never able to perform this type of maneuvers, my survival skills are too high.
Felony reckless driving, at least 2 points on license, increased insurance rates, and hopefully at least a little prison time (unlikely unless somebody gets hurt). But description is āweaving in and out of trafficā
dekkactā¢
Itās called āNew Jerseyā
boywithschizophreniaā¢
swerving?
bbbb125ā¢
Not sure itās common, but we often call it BMW style of driving.
Icarus_Flyteā¢
I call it "playing Pole Position" after the name of an old video game.
Guess_Who_21ā¢
Some say its swerving in and out of traffic,
different answers vary depending on what country/state/province youāre in
Careful-Sprayā¢
American here. I would call this "weaving in and out of traffic."
One small point regarding your question: we would say "what would you call that type" instead of "how would you call that type." The Russian idiom is different -- ŠŗŠ°Šŗ rather than ŃŃŠ¾.
I think "reckless" is honestly the best word for it, if you want a single word. Like others have said I would call that pattern "weaving in and out".
Sum-Duudā¢
I would call it weaving
Imaginary-Season141ā¢
Iād call this dangerous behaviour ādriving right when you should drive as left as possible.ā
If black car would just merge left, whole right lane could open upā¦ reckless
PrettyPrivilege50ā¢
Iād call it hogging the passing lane
Adventurous-Stop1103ā¢
Some younger people would also call it cutting traffic
eggpotionā¢
"what would you call..."
Not
"How would you call..."
It's a very common mistake
fairenufffā¢
It's called "(recklessly) weaving in and out of the traffic".
fueled_by_caffeineā¢
Weaving, or āweaving through trafficā named after the back and forward motion of a weaving loom.
The act of swerving across close in front of another driver, particularly if the other driver has to brake, Iād refer to as ācutting someone upā.
Weaving may or may not also mean cutting people up depending on how tight the gaps the shit driver forces themselves into are.
DeviatedPreversionsā¢
Cutting in front of someone in the next lane to get around of the car in front of you, with not much clearance, is called hole-shotting in the US. I think it's a pool (game) reference.
It's viewed as a sign of being a dangerous hothead.
Desperate_Ad2784ā¢
Reckless driving
chemtrailsarntreal1ā¢
The people in the left lane shouldnt be there, shit is fair game
Independent_Click462ā¢
The ā ā manoeuvre because youāll immediately stop existing with 1 mistake
RednightTheKiller17ā¢
Slalom
hahadontcallmeā¢
Stupid. It will be gene pool corrected soon.
MasterpieceFun5947ā¢
In my country we call it "Sewing" lol
Deep-Hovercraft6716ā¢
More specifically, the maneuver of passing someone on the inside like that is known as undertaking, as opposed to the more normal overtaking when you pass someone.
zurtodā¢
Cutting up - Florida
man0315ā¢
in Mandarin we call it čč”, snake movement or snake driving.
Galladite27ā¢
Probably "weaving." A slang term for doing this at high speeds would be "swimming."
Memeowisā¢
Cutting or chopping is pretty popular in AAVE
Objective-Turnover70ā¢
in places like NYC and some other parts of the tri state area itās called ācutting upā, not sure if this is also used elsewhere. i think it might be a way to describe it in LA as well, but iāve heard it the most on the east coast
User_man_personā¢
You might call it "weaving in and out of traffic" or "lane hopping"
You should ask "what would you call that type of reckless driving?" although "how" is close and i can understand you, "how" is more for questions such as "how do you like your coffee" or "how are you?" more asking about the state of something rather than what an object or action is.
CmorBelowā¢
Jazz driving
hunglowbungalowā¢
Weaving
Someoneainthereā¢
As a Russian, I have never heard of this type of "checkers" in my life!