How to solve today’s Wordle.
Looking for Monday’s Wordle hints, clues and answer? You can find them here:
Another day, another Wordle to solve. I’m quite busy getting ready for a little much-needed vacation, so I’m going to barrel right through the preamble and cut to the chase. Let’s solve this Wordle!
How To Solve Today’s Wordle
The Hint: You know what’s going on.
The Clue: This Wordle has a double letter.
Okay, spoilers below!
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The Answer:
Today’s Wordle
Wordle Analysis
Every day I check Wordle Bot to help analyze my guessing game. You can check your Wordles with Wordle Bot right here.
SPORE was a great opening guess today, leaving me with just 15 possible solutions and two green boxes. As I cam up with possible solutions, I thought of several that started with ‘A’ and several others that ended with ‘ARE’ and one of these words ticked both boxes: AWARE. I was not expecting it to be the answer, but I figured it would get me a lot closer to a solution (and if the word didn’t have an ‘A’ there were very few left to choose from). Much to my surprise and delight, it was the Wordle!
Competitive Wordle Score
Today’s Wordle Bot
I get 2 points for guessing in two and 1 for beating the Bot. The Bot gets 1 point for guessing in three and -1 for losing to me. This brings us to:
Erik: 15 points
Wordle Bot: 6 points
How To Play Competitive Wordle
- Guessing in 1 is worth 3 points; guessing in 2 is worth 2 points; guessing in 3 is worth 1 point; guessing in 4 is worth 0 points; guessing in 5 is -1 points; guessing in 6 is -2 points and missing the Wordle is -3 points.
- If you beat your opponent you get 1 point. If you tie, you get 0 points. And if you lose to your opponent, you get -1 point. Add it up to get your score. Keep a daily running score or just play for a new score each day.
- Fridays are 2XP, meaning you double your points—positive or negative.
- You can keep a running tally or just play day-by-day. Enjoy!
Today’s Wordle Etymology
The adjective aware ultimately goes back to Old English onġewær “cautious, watchful,” itself from Proto‑Germanic *ga‑waraz “aware, prudent,” based on the PIE root *wer‑ “to perceive, watch.” In Middle English, the Old English prefix on‑ was reanalyzed as a‑, giving us the modern form aware.
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