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Drifted

Drifted is the past tense and past participle of the verb drift. In English, it denotes movement or change that occurs under external influence or over time without deliberate steering, or a gradual change in condition or relation.

In physical contexts, something that has drifted is carried by currents or air. Examples include a boat

In everyday speech, drifted is used metaphorically to describe changes in focus, relationships, or plans. For

In science and measurement, drift describes systematic or random changes in a quantity over time. Genetic drift

Common phrases include “drifted off” (fell asleep) and “drifted apart” (grew less close over time). The term

that
drifted
off
course,
leaves
that
drifted
in
the
wind,
or
sediment
that
drifted
across
a
beach.
Objects
that
drift
may
do
so
with
little
or
no
control,
depending
on
environmental
forces
such
as
wind,
water,
or
gravity.
instance,
a
discussion
can
drift
to
unrelated
topics,
friends
can
drift
apart
after
a
period
of
reduced
contact,
or
a
person
may
drift
off
to
sleep
during
a
long
meeting
or
lecture.
refers
to
stochastic
changes
in
allele
frequencies
in
a
population,
while
sensor
drift
describes
gradual
changes
in
instrument
calibration
that
cause
readings
to
drift.
In
data
analysis,
a
signal
or
baseline
may
drift,
requiring
correction
or
calibration
to
maintain
accuracy.
is
used
across
disciplines
to
convey
passive
movement
or
gradual
change,
often
without
a
specified
cause
other
than
continuing
influence
from
external
factors.