0 present participle of wander --
1 to walk around slowly in a relaxed way or without any clear purpose or direction: --
She wrote an article about infidelity called "Wives who wander".
He was cruelly described as a creepy old man with wandering hands.
If his hands start to wander, tell him firmly, "No, I'm not ready for this."
She was found several hours later, wandering the streets, lost.
We spent the morning wandering around the old part of the city.
2 to start talking about a different subject from the one you were originally discussing: --
Another subject with nocturnal wandering once threw his wife on the floor, ran to his two children, took them into his arms and ran outside.
Sometimes short, telegraphic descriptions next to names tell of families reduced to ' wandering ' with their livestock after eviction.
To prevent the robot wandering at random when the chemical concentration is low, the robot takes a group of measurements ahead of its current position.
Delirium: prevalence, prognosis and management tiveness, euphoria, anger, wandering, easy startling, fast motor responses, distractibility, tangentiality, nightmares and persistent thoughts.
We believe this is the foundation for understanding the relationship between the wandering polygon and the dynamics of its critical leaves.
Finally, securing access to stairs and the outdoors with locks and gates should be done to prevent wandering of walking infants.
Wandering inversions of venous flow were observed in bridging veins between neighboring systems of drainage during low-flow perfusion.
In some patients with dementia, troublesome symptoms such as wandering, agitation or aggression may not be manageable in the context of the medical ward.