Good morning, Wordlers! If you're here we're assuming you'd like some subtle clues about the May 5 Wordleanswer to help you out, and fair enough — #320 is a bit of a cheeky one. If you couldn't crack today's Wordleanswer and would just like to know what it is, you'll find it at the bottom of this page, and we've provided background, strategies and more for you on your way down.
Wordlewas created by former Reddit engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his puzzle-loving partner and went suddenly viral in late 2021. As we've reported previously, the original game was bought by the New York Timesearlier this year for a very pretty penny.
There are loads of options to try, some mathematically sounder than others. I personally like to make sure whatever I'm starting with hasn't been an answer already, just so I'm still in with a chance of getting that tasty 1/6.
If you just want moreWordle, Dordleand Quordleand so on are the chaotic spin on the OG that you seek. If you want a fun theme, try these fandom-specific ones, or go bigger with the Hollywood guessing games Actorleand Framed.
Sorry to bust your bubble, but it's the same old Wordle, with some "harder" words given the boot. But you can always switch on Hard Mode, which means you can't throw in "strategic" guesses that don't have previously confirmed letters in them.
Not the day you're after? Here's the Wordleanswer and clues for May 4.
Want to practice or just be entertained? The whole archive of past Wordlesis available to play online.
This is down to some changes the New York Timeshas made to Wardle's original word list to remove obscure, offensive, or confusing words.
It's sports slang, and also probably better known as a name.
H!
Ready? Because the big spoiler is coming.
The solution to Wordle #320 is...
HOMER.
D'oh! This one's going to collect some Xs. It's interesting that the Timeshas kept HOMER in the word list — they removed HARRY, which is also a regular word but could be confusing given it's probably better known as a name. You could certainly say the same for HOMER, thanks to a certain big yellow doofus (sure, and some old Greek dude).
Didn't get it? No shame in that — this one had my Wordlegroup chat in a rage. Come back tomorrow for more helpful clues and hints — same bat time, same bat channel.
Reporting by Amanda Yeo, Caitlin Welsh and Adam Rosenberg contributed to this article.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to today's Wordle.
Topics Wordle
This very good doggo is also a sophisticated art criticIn March, half of visitors to the National Sexual Assault hotline were minorsTechnical glitches prevent millions from getting IRS stimulus checksThe iPhone SE could be the most important Apple phone to come out this yearKim Kardashian is calling on beauty bloggers to compete in her new TV showiPhone 12 might look like an iPad Pro, and the HomePod could shrinkOnline Town solves Zoom's problem with group video chatsSo someone noticed Donald Trump's chin looks like a ... frogThird of cable subscribers may cancel if NFL season postponedHow Easter and Passover are going digital during the coronavirus outbreakThe iPhone SE could be the most important Apple phone to come out this year9 weird, free stock images that make excellent Zoom backgroundsArnold Schwarzenegger gleefully photobombs tourists in ParisApple's iPhone SE (2020) is finally here and it's only $399'The Hunger Games' to stream free for one night only'Mario Kart 8 Deluxe' beat YouPorn in the race for trafficMichelle Obama wants to read to your kids on MondaysApple's highHow to fundraise for coronavirus relief on social mediaWaze now shows emergency food centers, coronavirus testing sites Sandy Skoglund’s Collages Put the 1980s in a Sharp New Light How Nina Howell Starr Tried to Sell The New Yorker on Photos “Sonnet,” an Unpublished Poem by Delmore Schwartz Velveeta, Light of my Life, Fire of My Loins When Your Rum Balls Are Too Strong, Just Call Them Edible Shots Why Does Moby Holiday Travel The Elliptical Life and Poetry of Etheridge Knight Why John Updike Loved Comics On Being Between Books Being the Last Man on Earth A Brief History of Christmas Trees as Political Lightning Rods Seeing the Sixties and Seventies Through 2001 and Alien Lesbian Whale: An Interview with Barbara Hammer The Sour Shopkeeper Addy Walker, American Girl The Inscrutable Madame Roland’s Remarkable Prison Memoir A Letter from Our Paris Editor, Antonin Baudry Roger Caillois’s Fifteenth Arrondissement for Phantoms The Optimist’s Creed (Or, Donut Philosophy)
3.3478s , 8613.6328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【myanmar sex videos】,Evergreen Information Network