My Blog
Technology

Today’s NYT Wordle Hints & Answer – Help for May 4, #1050

Today’s NYT Wordle Hints & Answer – Help for May 4, #1050
Today’s NYT Wordle Hints & Answer – Help for May 4, #1050


Today’s Wordle answer is a common word, but one of the letters might trip you up. We’ve ranked all the letters in the alphabet by popularity if you want to use this list to decide on your best start words.

Every day, we’ll post hints and then the answer for the current day’s Wordle, just in case you need it.

Today’s Wordle hints

Warning: If you keep reading, you’ll see the Wordle answer for Saturday, May 4, puzzle No. 1050. That could be a devastating spoiler for some players. But if you just need the answer — maybe you’re on your last guess and just don’t want to see a 900-game streak go bye-bye — keep reading.

Wordle hint No. 1: No repeats

There are no repeated letters in today’s Wordle answer.

Wordle hint No. 2: Vowels

There are three vowels in today’s Wordle answer.

Wordle hint No. 3: Start letter

Today’s Wordle answer begins with the letter V.

Wordle hint No. 4: Meaning

Today’s Wordle answer has to do with the importance, worth or price of something.

Wordle hint No. 5: Last letter

Today’s Wordle answer ends with the most common letter used in English.

TODAY’S WORDLE ANSWER

Here comes the spoiler: Today’s Wordle answer is: VALUE.

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s answer, No. 1049, May 3, was EBONY.

Past Wordle answers

April 29, No. 1045: CRAFT

April 30, No. 1046: PROWL

May 1, No. 1047: DIARY

May 2, No. 1048: SLICE

Everyday Wordle tips

I’ve written a lot about Wordle — from covering its 1,000th word to my list of the best starter words to a helpful two-step strategy to news about controversial word changes. I’ve even rounded up what I learned playing the hit online word puzzle for a full year. So if you’re rethinking your need for the actual answer, you might try tips from one of those stories.

Still need a starter word? One person told me they just look around and choose a five-letter object that they’ve spotted to use as their starter word — such as COUCH or CHAIR. I tend to stick to starter words that have the most popular letters used in English words. I like TRAIN as a starter, though I have a friend who uses TRAIL. I’ve read that people use the financial term ROATE, but I like to use words I actually know.

What is Wordle?

If you read this far, you know how to play. You have six chances to guess a five-letter word, and the game gives you feedback as to whether the letters you’ve guessed are in the puzzle, and whether you guessed the correct location for them. The New York Times bought the game from creator Josh Wardle for seven figures in 2022. Wardle famously created the game for his partner, and let her narrow down the 12,000 five-letter words in the English language to just 2,500, creating the database of answers. It was convenient, too, that he has a name that plays off “word.”

A Times spokesperson told me it lists the very first Wordle as appearing on June 19, 2021, and the paper celebrated the game’s 1000th word on March 15. Spoiler: That 1000th word was ERUPT. As in, “Dad will erupt if the Wordle is so tough he loses his streak.”

There are other fun games in the Times Games stable. My latest addiction is Connections, which I think is trickier than Wordle. This is the game where you look at a grid of 16 words and try to put them into four groups of related words. Sometimes the relationships between the words are pretty out there — like the time when it was four words that all began with rock bands, such as “Rushmore” and “journeyman.” (Connections got a little sassy on April Fools’ Day with an all-emoji puzzle. Some gamers did NOT find that funny.)

Spelling Bee is a popular Times game too. And there’s a new game that’s still in beta, Strands, which I’m trying to master.



Related posts

Formula 1 Racing 2023: How to Watch and Livestream the Singapore GP Today

newsconquest

Best T-Mobile Deals To Grab Right Now

newsconquest

Save Up to 86% on Surfshark VPN With These Early Black Friday Deals

newsconquest