Short trips or tasks you do to accomplish specific goals, like buying groceries, delivering messages, or paying bills.
From Old English 'ærnde,' meaning 'message' or 'mission,' related to Old Norse 'erendi.' The word originally meant an oral message or purpose someone was sent to accomplish, then evolved to mean the trip itself.
Before cars and phones, going on errands actually took forever—people would spend entire days running messages on foot! The invention of the automobile completely changed how we think about errands, turning them from full-day adventures into quick trips.
Errands became stereotypically gendered as domestic/support labor in 20th-century consumer culture, often assigned to women or junior staff.
Use neutrally; anyone may run errands. Avoid assigning based on gender or seniority.
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