Article 5TWJM How to win at Wordle using linguistic theory | David Shariatmadari

How to win at Wordle using linguistic theory | David Shariatmadari

by
David Shariatmadari
from US news | The Guardian on (#5TWJM)

The key to success in the viral word game is understanding the rules that govern how sounds fit together

It's a point in 2022's favour that, rather than violent insurrection or the misery of lockdown, most English-speaking people on the internet are currently preoccupied with a harmless word game. Harmless at the time of writing, I should say - it's popular enough that some kind of backlash is inevitable. I'm sure any day now Wordle will be revealed as a Bad Thing and I don't want to speculate how; I am merely here to observe that it is a) a lot of fun b) linguistically interesting, and I'd like to explain why. I may even be able to make you a bit better at it.

If you don't already know, Wordle is a browser-based puzzle that gives you six goes at guessing a five-letter word. If your guess includes a letter that's correct but in the wrong place, it turns yellow (more like ochre - now there's a good starting word for you). If it includes a letter that's correct and in the right place, it turns green, allowing you to build on your guesses until you hit the jackpot. The solution to the Wordle in the screenshot above is craze".

David Shariatmadari is the author of Don't Believe a Word: From Myths to Misunderstandings - How Language Really Works

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