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OATwander

wander

Flag: gbEnglishOxford American Thesaurus

wander
verb
1 you can spend the afternoon wandering around the estate:
stroll, amble, saunter, walk, dawdle, putter, ramble, maunder, meander;
roam, rove, range, knock around, drift, coast, gallivant, gad around, prowl, mill around;
trek, trudge, stretch one's legs;
Scottish, & Irish stravaig;
informal traipse, mosey, tootle;
British, informal mooch, bimble;
rare peregrinate.
2 he had wandered away from his friends | we are wandering from the point:
stray, depart, diverge, veer, swerve, deviate, digress, vary, drift, get separated, get sidetracked, go woolgathering;
rare divagate.
3 the child wandered off when we weren't looking:
get lost, lose one's way, go off course, lose one's bearings, go astray, go off at a tangent.
4 the narrow road wanders along the foreshore:
meander, wind, twist, turn, curve, zigzag, bend, snake, worm.
5 he was wandering now, his voice had dropped as he struggled to keep his thread:
be incoherent, ramble, babble, talk nonsense, rave, be delirious.
noun
stroll, amble, saunter, walk, roam, meander, dawdle, putter, ramble;
gallivant, prowl, drift, maunder, promenade, constitutional;
turn, breather, airing, trek, trudge;
informal traipse, mosey, tootle;
British, informal mooch;
rare perambulation, peregrination.
choose the right word wander, roam, rove, range, stray
These words all denote walking or moving in some way that is not a direct line. Some imply more energy and purpose than others.
Wandering denotes movement that is not purposefully directed toward a particular goal. This lack of purpose may result from indecision or lack of energy, or may simply indicate that someone is not in a hurry (she wandered aimlessly around the living room | wandering around looking at different displays).
■ Those who roam move around with little forward planning but generally show more energy than the wanderer (packs of savage dogs roamed the streets | dark lanes where gangs roamed).
Rove is a rather old-fashioned word meaning ‘travel constantly without a fixed long-term destination’ (he had roved the district in search of cinematic distraction) but is now most commonly used as roving, which conveys quite a strong sense of purpose (a roving busload of activists who went all over Europe). Roving often means ‘employed to work in many different places’ (communication with a roving agent was always fraught with difficulties).
Range is a less common word, indicating movement that is free from restrictions or constraints and is usually over a wide area but is nevertheless purposeful (railroad entrepreneurs ranged the globe in search of trade | they ranged over the Pacific in outriggers).
Stray denotes movement away from where one should be (if you stray off the route it's almost impossible to get back | for an instant her tired mind strayed), or into a wrong or inappropriate place (the military arrested anyone who strayed into the exclusion zone).
wander — OAT · Shobdo