Wend

Wend

Wend


wend

Definition

(verb) To travel in a slow, purposeful, or indirect way.

Example

They wended their way through the hills, stopping to take in every view.

Word Origin

Old English wendan, meaning “to turn” or “go,” originally used to describe physical and metaphorical journeys.

Fun Fact

Wend is one of those elegant, old-fashioned words that shows up in literature and poetic travel writing. It suggests more than just movement—it implies a journey that unfolds intentionally, even if slowly or circuitously. Though rarely used in speech today, you’ll still find it in books or historical dramas, giving a sense of timeless wandering—like “he wended his way through the mist.”

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