Verb
We wended through the narrow streets.
We wended our way through the narrow streets.
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Verb
Its remnants continued to wend their way north, carrying with them moisture from the Gulf.—Elizabeth Kolbert, New Yorker, 12 July 2025 The 80-year-old loved to kayak along the crystal clear waterway that wends some 250 miles from the springs of Texas Hill Country to the Gulf’s San Antonio Bay.—Alisha Ebrahimji, CNN Money, 9 July 2025 If the musicians’ visibility and viability has shifted, Sparks’ music remains inventive, brainy and flamboyant pop, often born of sunshiny moments and wistful memories that wend their way into lyrics.—Katherine Turman, Los Angeles Times, 28 May 2025 There are easy walks to challenging hikes open most of the year that wend through hardwood forests, ridges of dunes and extensive wetlands.—Karl Schneider, IndyStar, 15 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for wend
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English, from Old English wendan; akin to Old High German wenten to turn, Old English windan to twist — more at wind entry 3
Noun
German Wende, from Old High German Winida; akin to Old English Winedas, plural, Wends
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