Lazy Sunday is finally here—at least in my neck of the woods—the final weekend of the school semester. Easy breezy classes are just days away, with everyone—from teachers to students to staff—already having one foot out the door.
Summer is officially one month away. The summer solstice is on June 21, the day after my birthday. I usually have a summer solstice party for my birthday every year, but this year we’re going back to Montana to celebrate my grandmother’s 90th birthday. I love Montana and it should be fun.
It’s great that your birthday falls on or near the summer solstice because it’s the longest day of the year. Christmas is exactly half a year away. I always felt lucky for that. For a lot of things, actually.
Anyway, let’s do this wordlay so we can be lazy. (Note: I’m not really going to be lazy because I have 1 million different projects and things, but I believe you (maybe laziness on my behalf).
How to Solve Today’s Wordle
Note: Loud and obnoxious. Rude and overconfident. impulsiveness
Clue: This word has more consonants than vowels.
Answer:
.
.
.
Today’s Wordle Etymology
The word „brush” has an interesting etymology. It originated in the mid-19th century and has its roots in the Scottish dialect. Here is a breakdown of its etymology:
The word „brash” originally comes from the Scottish word „brash” which means „to attack” or „to attack”. It is derived from the Scottish Gaelic word „bradh”, meaning „sudden rain” or „sudden attack”. The Scottish Gaelic word „bradh” also had the sense of a sudden burst or explosion.
Over time, the meaning of „brush” came to include the idea of suddenness or impulse. In English, it came to describe someone who acts impulsively or impulsively, often without considering the consequences. It can also be used to describe things that are flashy, flashy, or lack subtlety.
The evolution of „brush” demonstrates how words change in meaning and usage as they move from one language or dialect to another.
Wordbot analysis
After I finish a Wordle, I always go to check-in Wordley bot See how I scored on each individual guess and see if I beat Pat or not.
mouse Even if I only get one green box, that’s not a bad starting guess. This reduced the possible words to just 54 (out of over 2,000). I decided to guess all new letters for my second guess, hoping to eliminate as many as possible. Hair Adding all the remaining vowels left me with three words to choose from.
Unfortunately, these were Brush, trash And accident There is no way of knowing which of the three it is. Instead of guessing one by one, I chose a word that I knew wouldn’t be right: of the basket. Since it includes 'C’ and 'T’, it will tell me for sure what the final answer is. I could have chosen a gambler. Even if I got it wrong, I would have had a 50/50 chance of getting guess #4 right. But this way I was 100% sure to get it in 4. Should I have taken my chances? Who knows. I guess I was legit Courage.
Today’s Score: Alas, guessing on 4 is zero points and losing to Wordle Bot (who got on 3) is -1 overall. So good!
Play word match against me!
I am playing PvP wordline cutthroat game against my opponent wordle. Now you have to play against me! I can be your enemy! (Your helpful Wordle guide, of course). You can too Play against the bot if you have a New York Times subscription.
- Here are the rules: 1 point To get wordly in 3 guesses.
- 2 points To get it in 2 guesses.
- 3 points 1 to get at the guess.
- 1 point For beating Eric
- 0 points To get it in 4 guesses.
- -1 point To get in 5 guesses.
- -2 points To get it in 6 guesses.
- -3 points For lost.
- -1 point For losing to Eric
If that’s your score, you can keep track of your score or play daily if you want.
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