Wander is one of English's oldest surviving verbs, traceable to Old English wandrian and beyond that to Proto-Germanic *wandrōjaną. The root idea is turning — the same root that produced wind (the twisting verb, not the weather noun) and wend. To wander is to turn this way and that without a fixed bearing. The word has barely shifted in meaning across a thousand years, an unusual feat for any verb. What did change was the connotation. In Old English, wandering could be dangerous — exile and displacement were real threats, and the 'wanderer' of the famous Anglo-Saxon elegy is a grief-stricken outcast. By the Romantic era, wandering had become poetic and liberating: Wordsworth wandered lonely as a cloud and meant it as a compliment. German kept the purposeful flavour: wandern means to hike with intent, and Wanderlust — borrowed into English around 1902 — describes not idle roaming but an active yearning for the open road.