mazelike

English

Etymology

From maze +‎ -like.

Adjective

mazelike (comparative more mazelike, superlative most mazelike)

  1. Like a maze; labyrinthine.
    • 1985 February 9, Cindy Patton, “Heterosexual AIDS Panic: A Queer Paradigm”, in Gay Community News, volume 12, number 29, page 3:
      If a military man with AIDS were discharged for homosexuality, he would lose his medical benefits and be thrown into the already overtaxed and maze-like system of public welfare.
    • 2015 April 30, Jordan Bissell, “10 wacky U.S. restaurants”, in CNN[1]:
      The dark New York restaurant is a mazelike “ninja village,” with iron bars and cold stone lining the walls.