It depends whether you are talking about hard linebreaks, where a newline character is actually inserted into the text, or a soft linebreak, which only affects how the text is displayed on the screen.
I suspect that you are referring to the latter.
If that is correct, then you want to :set list
and probably add set list
to your vimrc.
Besides, wrapping the display,just the display, not the actual text at word boundaries, list
also causes Vim to display various "invisible" characters, such as spaces, tabs, and (hard) newlines, according to the listchars
variable (see :help listchars
for more); if you want the soft line-wrapping at word boundaries but not invisible characters, you could presumably set the listchars
to nothing.
I personally find that I sometimes want list enabled and sometimes not. :set nolist
turns it off and :set list!
toggles it. And just for completeness, :set list?
tells you whether is is currently enabled or not. Those are all standard Vim conventions.
And if that's too much typing, you could set up a custom key mapping in your .vimrc, but that's another question.