Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
How to solve today’s mane.
Pictures of SOPA / Lightrocket via Getty Images
The last week of August is finally here. Maybe I shouldn’t say “finally.” This month was quite flying, like most months these days. Time flies when you’re having fun, they say. Seems to fly no matter.
It is on Monday. There is a job to do. Let’s solve this set!
Looking for yesterday’s mane? Check Tips, Tracks and Answer 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:
Play puzzles and games on Forbes
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: Aircraft (377 words remaining)
Tip: Joy or joy.
Clue: This snack has three consonants in a row.
Okay, Spoilers down! The answer comes!
.
.
.
Today’s snack
Credit: 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.
The plane is usually a pretty good opening guess, but today it was awful. 377 words are left. The crane – quite frequent second benefit for your humble narrator – decreased that by nine, but it gave me three yellow boxes. I could think of a few words that ended with imit, so I tried to score in size. It’s almost brought me. It’s just born and Mirth left. I rolled over a coin. Mirth to win!
Today’s Bot
Credit: Erik Cain
I get 0 points for guessing in four and 0 to tie bot. It is the same with Bot, holding in a narrow August lead:
Erik: 13 points
Wordle Bot: 14 points
Word Mirth comes from old English peacemakerWhich means “joy, pleasure, pleasure.” It is in turn developed from Mirge (“Pleasant, pleasant, sweet”), which is associated with old German German Nightmore (“Short, short, pleasant”) and Gothic Maurgjan (“To shorten”). The semantic shift is probably created with the idea that something is “short” or “easy” in the sense of being pleasant or pleasant. Over time in Medium English, Mirth (s) narrowed to mean joy, entertainment or joy, often expressed in laughter and ceremony.
Be sure to follow me for all my daily guides for puzzle rooms, TV show and movie review and more here on this blogRecording!