If you're
chasing solid synonyms for 'stray,' I keep a little go-to toolkit that always helps me land the right shade of meaning. For straightforward lists, I browse Power Thesaurus for crowd-ranked options and Thesaurus.com or Merriam‑Webster's thesaurus for vetted alternatives. Those three will give you quick choices like 'wandering,' 'roaming,' 'errant,' 'vagrant,' 'wayward,' 'astray,' and 'roving,' but they don't always show which sense fits—so I cross-check.
When I want nuance, I flip to OneLook's reverse dictionary to find words by definition, and WordHippo or Collins to see examples in sentences. If I'm being picky about tone—casual versus formal—I check
google books or the Corpus of Contemporary American English for real-world usage frequency. For creative or metaphorical meanings (a 'stray thought' vs a 'stray dog'), I search examples and synonyms under the specific part of speech and context. That little extra step stops me from swapping in a word that sounds right but feels awkward on the page.
If you want a tiny starter list tailored to contexts: for animals try 'stray,' 'feral,' 'vagrant,' 'roaming'; for ideas or attention use 'wandering,' 'aimless,' 'aloof,' 'astray'; for objects or places try 'outlying,' 'isolated,' 'errant.' I love hunting these down because the right single word can change the whole scene—happy word-hunting, I always find it oddly satisfying.