WEND


Meaning of WEND in English

I. ˈwend verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English wenden, from Old English wendan; akin to Old High German wenten to turn, wend, Old Norse venda, Gothic wandjan; causative from the root of English wind (to turn)

intransitive verb

1. obsolete : to occur in the course of events : come about

2. obsolete : to turn from one direction, position, condition, or form to another

3. obsolete : to go or pass away : depart , end

4. : to direct one's course : go one's way : proceed , travel

through the fields and the woods and over the walls I have wended — Robert Frost

transitive verb

1. obsolete : to change the direction, position, or character of

2. archaic : to turn (a ship's head) in tacking

3. obsolete : to cause (oneself) to go : betake

4. : to proceed on (one's way) : go on : direct

leisurely the governor and his associates wended their way … up the valley — J.E.Winston

II. noun

( -s )

Usage: capitalized

Etymology: German Wende, from Old High German Winida; akin to Old English Winedas, plural, Wends, Old Norse Vindir

1. : a member of a Slavic people occupying eastern Germany to the Baltic sea during the early medieval period and now surviving along the middle and upper Spree river

2. : wendish

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.