If you haven’t cracked the code yet, the solution you seek is “worse.” For people who learn English as a second language, words like these are typically a stumbling block because the regular rules of conjugation do not apply. Instead of taking the -er and -est suffixes, “bad” morphs into “worse” and “worst” in its comparative and superlative forms, respectively. This is because, according to Vocabulary.com, English based the word on the Old Saxon “werran,” which means to entangle, complicate, or compound.
We figured out the answer on our fourth guess, although things could have been, uhh … worse. WordleBot reported that most players needed five tries to crack the code. Our opening guess, mauve, colored one tile green and reduced the possible answers to 170, so it wasn’t a bad start. After guessing “shine,” there were only 11 words left, and “close” brought us closer to the answer. We hope you do even better.
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