Today’s ‘Wordle’ Hints And Clues For Sunday, February 11th (Wordle #967)

Today’s ‘Wordle’ Hints And Clues For Sunday, February 11th (Wordle #967)

A smart phone reveals the screen of the popular online video game Wordle which has actually been purchased by The New … [+] York Times Company from its developer, US-based software application engineer Josh Wardle. Image date: Tuesday February 1, 2022. (Photo by Nick Ansell/PA Images by means of Getty Images)

PA Images through Getty Images

Sunday, lazy Sunday. I’m all for it. I’ve been feeling a bit under the weather condition recently so a little bit of laziness seems like simply the important things.

The snow has actually stopped, however not before disposing a complete 36″ on us. It definitely seems like winter season now! Lazy winter season Sunday.

Oh, and it’s the Super Bowl! Super Bowl LVIII, a face-off of previous champs the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs. The Chiefs won the last time these 2 groups took on. I’ll be … half-watching. Ideally there will be some amusing commercials!

Have a look at my streaming guide for this weekend’s other streaming choices Here.

How To Solve Today’s Wordle

The Hint: Frequently credited to the raven.

The Clue: This Wordle has a double letter.

The Answer:

Can you resolve today’s expression?

Today’s Wordle

Credit: Erik Kain

Wordle Analysis

Every day I examine Wordle Bot to see how I did. You can examine your Wordles with Wordle Bot Here


Okay, not terrific. Extra is a great opening guess in basic however I had poor luck today. 202 words stayed, and boink boinked that down to 10. Under left me with simply 2 guesses and I chose the never ever for the win. Huzzah!

Competitive Wordle Score

An overall wash today. Both I and Wordle Bot took 4 guesses to get the Wordle so no points there and absolutely no for connecting. NO!

Today’s Wordle Etymology

The word ‘never ever’ originates from the Old English nǣfrewhich is a mix of ne implying “not” and ǣfre suggesting “ever.” The Old English term nǣfre itself is stemmed from Proto-Germanic nē aiwōwhich likewise results in comparable buildings in other Germanic languages, such as Old High German niowisuggesting “never ever.”

The shift from Old English to the contemporary English ‘never ever’ included the dropping of the preliminary vowel noise in ǣfre and the amalgamation of the 2 parts into a single word. The significance of ‘never ever’ has actually stayed reasonably steady in time, suggesting a negation of “ever” and utilized to signify something that has actually not occurred at any time or will not occur at any time in the future.

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