It's the Word of the Day podcast for March 9th.
Today's word is WEND, spelled W-E-N-D.
WEND is a verb.
It's a literary word that means to move slowly from one place to another,
usually by winding or indirect course.
Wending is traveling or proceeding on one's way in such a manner.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Otter Country in Search of the Wild Otter by Miriam Darlington.
Otters do not like to share food.
There is a flickering movement of jaws before they swallow and dive again.
For a moment I think they have left.
Then they surface once more and I make out two long shapes, one just ahead of the other.
They wend their way further down the waterway before insinuating themselves back into the dark.
The poet Robert Frost, in his poem Reluctance,
used Wen's familiar sense of to direct one's course with these lines,
out through the fields and woods and over the walls I have wended.
By the time of the poem's publication in 1913,
many other senses of wend had wended their way into and out of popular English usage,
including to change direction, to change someone's mind,
to transform into something else, and to turn a ship's head in tacking.
All of that turning is linked to the words old English ancestor wendan,