Wordle 412 Answer, August 5: Check Out Hints And Clues To Solve Today's Wordle Puzzle
Wordle 412 Answer Today: Here are some clues and hints for you to crack today's Wordle puzzle
Wordle 412 Answer Today, August 5: The Wordle challenge today is a tricky one. The word of the day is a familar term, but used in two different ways with two different meanings. It's not a word that is used in daily conversations, unless in specific conditions. It's unlikely to be a starter word because it has only one vowel. The combination of letters is easy to guess, but you may find yourself in the multiple options trap. Need hints to solve Wordle 412? Read on.
How To Play Wordle And What Are Its Rules
Wordle, created by US-based software engineer Josh Wardle last year, has completed a year of its existence. The word game is now owned by The New York Times, which bought it from Wardle in January this year. Free-to-play Wordle is essentially a guessing game, and has been a hit from the beginning. NYT did not bring any changes to its features after the takeover.
Every day, rather midnight, a new challenge is released across the world. This means some countries get to see the new five-letter word before others do.
The rules are simple. A player gets six chances to guess the randomly generated word of the day. The squares meant to contain the letters turn green, yellow or grey depending on the status of the letters you enter, and the colours of the box let you know if you are on the right track or wrong.
If the box turns green, the letter is in the right position. A yellow box means the word contains this letter but you have placed it wrong. A grey box means the letter is incorrect.
Wordle 412 Hints And Answer
- The word has 1 vowel
- There is one duplicate letter
- The vowel used is 'U'
- It's a noun, but used as adjective too
- The first letter is 'B'
We hope the hints were useful. If not, read on to see the correct answer.
The Wordle 412 answer is 'BUGGY'. It means "a small car, usually with no roof, designed for driving on rough ground", as described by the Cambridge dictonary. 'Buggy' as an adjective has a completely different meaning — "full of annoying bugs".