Wondering; although it might be confusing that thoughts, minds, can wander, too.
Wondering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "deep thinking"."I am wondering what to have for dinner."Wandering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "walking or travelling"."Why are you wandering around the house?"
with reference to
It is correct
Both are correct.
That is the correct spelling of "thinking."
Wondering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "deep thinking"."I am wondering what to have for dinner."Wandering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "walking or travelling"."Why are you wandering around the house?"
That is the correct spelling of "wondering" (thinking, pondering).
with reference to
"Correct thinking" is just what the name implies. Thinking that is not erroneous. Logically correct thought.
Correct punctuation: "If you plan on going wandering around by yourself," she told him, "you be careful to stay out of the gully."
It is correct
Both "in reference to" and "with reference to" are correct and can be used interchangeably to introduce a topic or point that is being mentioned or discussed.
There is nothing grammatically wrong with the sentence "We were wondering."
No, the correct phrase is "thinking about".
Thinking is the correct spelling.
It is correct.
Yes that is correct 500,500. Just wondering why did you need to know?