Asked by Rebecca

Wrapped meaning

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Do you mean the single word “wrapped” or a specific phrase/title (song, film, etc.)? Here are common meanings by context — pick which fits or tell me the sentence you saw it in.

- Literal (covered or enclosed): past participle of wrap.
Example: “The baby is wrapped in a blanket.”

- Gift/packaging: a present that has been covered in wrapping paper.
Example: “The gift was beautifully wrapped.”

- Finished or concluded (informal): “That’s a wrap” or “we’ve wrapped the project.”
Example: “Filming wrapped yesterday.”

- Pleased/satisfied (informal, chiefly British/Australian): “I’m wrapped” = very happy or pleased.
Example: “I got the job — I’m wrapped.”

- Engrossed or preoccupied: “wrapped up in” means absorbed by something or someone.
Example: “She’s so wrapped up in her work she forgets to eat.”

- Technical/text: wrapped text or word wrap — text continuing to the next line.
Example: “Turn off word wrap if you want long lines.”

If you give the sentence or context where you saw it, I’ll give the precise meaning.