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How to solve today’s mane.
Pictures of SOPA / Lightrocket via Getty Images
Friday is that it means that it is almost the end of work week for those of you who still work Monday to Friday. It is also 2KP Friday, so you double your points, positive or negative, if you play competing snacks. Let’s get to solve, don’t we?
Looking for a bite on Thursday? See our guide here.
Wordle is a daily word of a puzzle where your goal is to hit a hidden five-letter word in six attempts or less. After each convenience, the game gives feedback to help you get closer to the answer:
Use these clues to narrow your guesses. Every day brings a new word and everyone around the world trying to solve the same puzzle. Some words also play competitive snacks against friends, family, a mane bot or even against me, your modest narrative. See the rules for competitive snacks towards the end of this post.
Vordle Botova Home Word: Slate
My initial word Today: Guilt (495 words remaining).
Tip: Somehow like floating but with a little more direction. Can also describe snow.
Clue: This snack has a lot more consonant than a vowel.
Okay, Spoilers down! The answer comes!
.
.
.
Today’s snack
Screenshot: Erik Cain
I check the Gorni Bot every day to help analyze the game guess. You can check your Gordle score with Wordle Bot here.
It was a bad blame today that was open today, leaving me with a huge 495 remaining possible solutions. The crane has reduced only four. I assumed a third, although I should probably go with the drift. If I had, I’d finally beat stupid bite this month!
Today’s Bot
Screenshot: Erik Cain
The fourth day in a row, biting bot and I tied. We got 0 for that, 0 for four and 0 points in total, which means we don’t get the benefits or suffer from 2KP Friday. Our total total overall September remains:
Erik: 2 points
Wordle Bot: 5 points
“Drift” comes from middle English work “To float, be guided,” from old Norse wizard “To snow, drift, drive before the wind.” It is connected to proto-Germanic Driban (“Drive”), who also gave old English obscure (“Drive”). The feeling of “snow or sand accumulated by the wind” was developed at 14. century, while figurative use (“wandering, move without a goal”).
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