Simple Explanation by Analogy
Example 1: An Ipad "wraps" an Iphone

The Ipad is basically a large Iphone.....it's basically an Iphone but with a different exterior (larger screen). i.e. the Ipad has a different "wrapper".
It's literally the same thing with "objects".
"Wrappers may expose different features than the underlying object" ......okay, but what does this mean?
Sometimes the wrapper might limit the things you can access inside. For example, the ipad may limit your ability to make phone calls, even though the Iphone buried within it, has that capability.
Example 2: Automatic car acting as a wrapper to a manual car
Think of an automatic car, and a manual car.
In an automatic car, there is an engineering mechanism which automatically changes the gears for you, but fundamentally, under the surface, the car is still a manual car.
In other words, the automatic features of the car "wraps" the manual functionality of the car.
If you wanted to manually change the gears by yourself in an automatic car - you simply can't do it. The ability to change gears "is not exposed" in the automatic car. But it is exposed in a manual car. Granted the analogy is a little strained, but I hope you see what I'm getting at.
But what is the purpose of a wrapper?
You'd write a wrapping class if you wanted to simplify things. Leave all the complicated bits inside the wrapper, ensuring that those complicated bits are not 'exposed'.
Examples - wrappers used in code
Pysch: It's a ruby wrapper around libyaml, which I believe is written in C. If you wanted to use a libyaml, but with ruby, what are your options? Pysch allows you to write in Ruby, while getting all the benefits of libyaml underneath. It "wraps" libyaml.
.net wrappers: For example, you could have a .net wrapper, which underneath, makes COM calls. If you didn't have a wrapper, then you'd be forced to make those COM calls yourself. Luckily with the wrapper, you'd just make the calls to the .net wrapping code - which would in turn make those COM calls. And that should hopefully simplify things for you. The AutoCAD .net API is the perfect example. It is a glorified wrapper for the ObjectARX API.