C++ is a multi-paradigm language, where OO, procedural, generic/generative and - to a lesser (but increasing with C++0x) extent functional - are among the paradigms. You should use whichever is the best fit for the problem: you want the code to be easy to get and keep right, and hard to stuff up.
The utility of classes is in packaging data (state) along with the related functions. If your wordify
function doesn't need to retain any state between calls, then there's no need to use a class/object. That said, if you can predict that you will soon want to have state, then it may be useful to start with a class so that the client code doesn't need to change as much.
For example, imagine adding a parameter to the function to specify whether the output should be "first", "second" instead of "one", "two". You want the behaviour to be set once and remembered, but somewhere else in the application some other code may also use the functionality but prefer the other setting. It's a good idea to use an object to hold the state and arrange it so each object's lifetime and accessibility aligns with the code that will use it.
EDIT:
In the context of this question where does the margin between C and C++ exist (if any)?
C++ just gives you a richer set of ways to tackle your programming tasks, each with their necessary pros and cons. There are plenty of times when the best way is still the same way it would have been done in C. It would be perverse for a C++ programmer to choose a worse way simply because it was only possible in C++. Still, such choices exist at myriad levels, so it's common to have say a non-[class-]member function that takes a const std::string&
parameter, combining the procedural function call with object-oriented data that's been generated by a template
: it all works well together.