Today’s ‘Wordle’ #1333 tips, clues and answers to Tuesday, February 11

Looking for Monday’s Wordle anti -Surbs, clues and answers? You can find them here:

ForbesToday’s ‘Wordle’ #1332 tips, clues and answers to Monday 10th February

Another Tuesday, another Wordle to solve. It remains mysteriously beautiful outside, and I still find it disturbing that it is this heat in February. I will not amount to the point. But pray for snow, at least for us here in the southwest. We prefer it over fires.

In any case, let’s solve this Wordle!

How to solve today’s Wordle

Tip: You get this if you play competitive Wordle.

The clue: This Wordle ends with a vocals.

Okay, Spoilers below!

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The answer:

Wordle analysis

Every day I check the Wordle Bot to help analyze my guess game. You can check your Wordles with Wordle Bot Right here.


I felt quite good at this one. It turns out that crime pays, and today it left me with only 7 remaining possible solutions, two yellow boxes and a green box. I rearranged the yellow boxes perfectly, but missed Wordle with a single letter with scared. Maybe ironically, the answer was score.

Competitive Wordle score

I get 1 point to guess in three, but -1 points to lose to bot who succeeded and got this on guess # 2.


How to Play Competitive Wordle

  • Guess in 1 is worth 3 points; Guess in 2 is worth 2 points; Guess in 3 is worth 1 point; Guess in 4 is worth 0 points; Guess in 5 is -1 points; Guess in 6 is -2 points and missing Wordle is -3 points.
  • If you beat your opponent you get 1 point. If you tie you get 0 points. And if you lose for your opponent you get -1 points. Add it up to get your score. Keep a daily driving result or just play for a new score every day.
  • Fridays are 2xp, which means you double your points – positive or negative.
  • You can hold a running number or just play day by day. Enjoy!

Today’s Wordle ethymology

The word Score comes from the old Norse Crazymeaning “notch” or “Mark.” It went into in -middle English through old English Scoruwhich means “thieves” (probably from counting by noting on a tally stick). Over time, Score Developed to mean a registered count, an amount (especially multipla of thieves) and later expanded to meanings in music, sports and general tallies.


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