daily house mouse
Wordle 709 3/6
daily house mouse
Wordle 709 3/6
Wordle 709 4/6
PUNCH CRUST DOUSE MOUSE
La palabra del día #508 5/6
(SUPER RATÓN ÁRIDA MIGRA FIRMA)
Wordle 709 2/6
(SUPER MOUSE)
Wordle 710 5/6
ADIEU COVEN TENET SNEER KNEEL
Wordle 710 5/6
Wordle 710 5/6
GRASP BLOCK MILKY KNELT KNEEL
La palabra del día #509 4/6
(TRACÉ CHULO CLISO COLMO)
Wordle 710 4/6
(TRACE MINED HOVEN KNEEL)
daily lever kneel
Wordle 710 3/6
Wordle 711 3/6
ADIEU ALIVE AGILE
daily agile
Wordle 711 2/6
Wordle 711 4/6
CRANE SAUTE AMPLE AGILE
Question: When you look at the WordleBot analysis, it sometimes tells you you had a choice between two words, but in the stats it tells you that one word was more likely than the other. Today, for instance AGILE was a little more likely than my guess of ADDLE.
Where do these odds come from? Isn’t Wordle pulling from a great big list of possible words, and so any two words are equally-likely? Or does it weigh more common words higher so they have a higher chance of being there?
Note: I know there are two different lists, one for all possible solutions and one for all words it accepts. But in this case, both words were a possible solution, both words fit, yet one was slightly more “likely” than the other.
Maybe it is looking at the double-D as being a lesser option than the word with differing letters?
Wordle 711 6/6
FROTH WINKY CUBIC ASIDE ALIVE AGILE
So it has a list of words, which AGILE and ADDLE are both on, but it sometimes avoids choosing the latter as the day’s puzzle because it doesn’t like double letters?
La palabra del día #510 3/6
(MANTO FERIA VIRAL)
Wordle 711 3/6
(MANTO GRAPE AGILE)
scout daily gamey hanky jazzy
Wordle 712 5/6
Wordle 712 6/6
ADIEU GROAN SHAFT WACKY BALMY JAZZY
Wordle 712 5/6
FROST PLINK HEDGE JAMMY JAZZY
Wordle 712 6/6
Phew indeed!