It is somehow now July, but let's not dwell on the relentless passage of linear time when we could be doing our daily Wordletogether instead. It's certainly more satisfying when you work it out all by yourself, but sometimes you just get stuck — and that's where we come in.
The answer to the July 1 Wordlecan be found at the end of this article, with the spoiler clearly signposted, or you can make your way down in a more leisurely fashion for a few general tips, gentle hints, and strategies to help you every day.
Wordleis a daily word game created by Josh Wardle, a Brooklyn-based software engineer who has developed something of a reputation as a crafter of interesting social experiments. Every day, the people of the internet are greeted with a fresh word puzzle that can only be solved — or not! — using a series of process-of-elimination clues.
Thousands of people around the globe now play this game each day, and fans have even created alternatives to Wordleinspired by the original format. This includes music identification game Heardle, Hollywood nerd faves Actorleand Framed, and variations like Dordleand Quordlethat make you guess multiple words at once.
Not the day you're after? You'll find the Wordleanswer for July 2 here.
You might find "Wordle" results in an iOS App Store or Google Play Store search, but don't mistake it for the real thing. Wordle, the original one Josh Wardle came up with and kindly delivered unto the internet in late 2021, currently only exists as a browser game that lives right here. If you're playing it anywhere else, it's — at best — a shameless knock-off that's trying to capitalize on someone else's success.
We have some ideas to help you pick the perfect first move (or as close to perfect as you can get without just magically guessing the exact right word). Such tips include choosing a word with at least two different vowels in it, plus a few common consonants such as S, T, R, or N.
If you've been finding Wordletoo easy, there is a Hard Mode you can enable to give yourself more of a challenge. But unless you activate this mode, we can assure you that Wordle isn't getting harder.
It's actually a Spanish word — one that's used in English to specify both a kind of food and a kind of animal.
The letter P!
SEE ALSO: The best Apple deals ahead of Prime Day 2022: MacBooks, iPads, AirPods, and moreReady?
We'll tell you today's word now.
It is...
[Drumroll...]
PINTO.
Wordledoesn't often have as the answer these kinds of words — ones that are outright borrowed from other languages. PINTO is Spanish for painted or speckled, which is why it's used to refer to both the bean and the horse with that kind of patterning.
Reporting by Caitlin Welsh, Amanda Yeo and Adam Rosenberg contributed to this article.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to today's Wordle.
Topics Wordle
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra deal: Save $200 at Best Buy
People are loving Hillary Clinton's burns on Donald Trump
Hillary Clinton turned her website into a fact checker for the debate
#UnlikelyDebateGuests highlights people we only wish could be at the presidential debate
Ruggable x Jonathan Adler launch: See the new designs
Trump says Miss Universe winner Alicia Machado gained 'a massive amount of weight'
Kid Cudi releases tracklist for new album, 'Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin'
How 'Forza Horizon 3' got Australia to look so damn good
NYT Connections hints and answers for February 1: Tips to solve 'Connections' #601.
This dictionary Twitter account had the best lexicographical burns of the debate
Many Indigenous communities still lack broadband internet. Here's why.
Xiaomi's Mi 5s and Mi 5s Plus laugh at your flagship's specs
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。