0 past simple and past participle of stray
1 to travel along a route that was not originally intended, or to move outside a limited area:
Yes madam; while tending his flocks, some of them strayed and fell over a precipice.
However, the social context strategy strayed from this pattern of distribution.
Histories published since then have not strayed too far from this outline.
Young individuals were all reddish-brown coated or strayed wild boar and were assumed to be aged <12 months.
So too were the equally perennial conflicts between households, over strayed livestock and accusations of theft.
I have noted how the notion of visualisation strayed from its coded meaning.
It can be culled from the above that the commission did not see the empirical state as having strayed from the secular norm.
We argue that when elites borrow value rhetoric from ideological opponents, they are recognized as having strayed from traditional positions.