Quordle is a four-board word puzzle where players tackle Classic, Chill, and Extreme modes each day. Today’s puzzle set includes tricky spellings and deceptive words that hide familiar patterns, so stay alert for odd letter pairings.
Quordle Classic Hints and Answers: 12 December 2025
Word 1:
- Tiny marine crustacean often eaten by whales and seals.
- Five letters, ends with a doubled consonant.
- Begins with a hard consonant sound uncommon in everyday nouns.
- Often discussed in ecology or ocean-food-chain contexts.
Word 2:
- Refers to the ability to see or something seen.
- Contains a silent-letter cluster common in English spelling.
- Starts with a consonant that also begins many sensory words.
- Rhymes with “light” and is used in everyday and literary contexts.
Word 3:
- Name of a muted, brownish fabric color used in uniforms.
- Begins with an unusual two-letter cluster in English transliterations.
- Five letters; frequently appears in fashion and military descriptions.
- Ends with a vowel sound that makes the spelling slightly unexpected.
Word 4:
- Historical term for a territory ruled by a duke.
- Five letters, ends with a consonant cluster that looks like “chy.”
- Often found in historical or legal contexts rather than everyday speech.
- Starts with the same letter as “duke” and denotes rank/region.
Quordle Classic answers today
Answers:
KRILL, SIGHT, KHAKI, DUCHY
Quordle Chill Hints and Answers: 12 December 2025
Word 1:
- A common verb meaning to go see someone or someplace.
- Five letters; starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant.
- Frequently used in travel, social, and appointment contexts.
- Shares a vowel-consonant rhythm that makes it easy to place.
Word 2:
- Past tense of a very common verb about putting words down.
- Five letters with a consonant cluster at the start.
- Appears often in narratives and reports about past actions.
- Pronunciation shifts from the base verb in spelling and sound.
Word 3:
- Can be a verb (observe) or a noun (a timepiece).
- Five letters with a common four-letter root plus a final consonant.
- Used frequently in both casual speech and technical writing.
- Rhymes with “match” and is common in everyday vocabulary.
Word 4:
- Small enclosed space for selling or for privacy.
- Five letters; ends with a doubled consonant.
- Common at fairs, events, or as a noun in business contexts.
- Starts with the same consonant as “book” but finishes differently.
Quordle Chill answers today
Answers:
VISIT, WROTE, WATCH, BOOTH
Quordle Extreme Hints and Answers: 12 December 2025
Word 1:
- Simple past of a verb meaning to become ice or very cold.
- Five letters; ends with a vowel-consonant pattern that can mislead guesses.
- Common in weather and metaphorical expressions.
- Shares root with a present-tense verb that changes vowel sounds.
Word 2:
- Nonstandard or dialect past form of a common verb (bring).
- Five letters; looks like a regular past-tense form but is colloquial.
- Often appears in dialogue or regional writing rather than formal text.
- Its spelling can trick players expecting a regular past tense ending.
Word 3:
- Someone who skis; a noun formed by adding an agentive ending.
- Five letters; ends with the common “-er” that denotes a person.
- Frequently seen in winter sports contexts and travel copy.
- Pronounced with two syllables and a clear vowel-consonant split.
Word 4:
- Past tense of a verb meaning to consume liquid.
- Five letters; commonly used in everyday speech and storytelling.
- Shares a base verb whose past forms are irregular.
- Often appears in past-tense narratives and casual reports.
Quordle Extreme answers today
Answers:
FROZE, BRUNG, SKIER, DRANK
How to solve Quordle effectively
- Start with strong openers:
- Observe all boards together:
- Prioritize greens and shared yellows:
- Avoid repeating letters too soon:
- Focus on letter patterns:
- Work from the easiest to hardest:
- Stay calm on the last guesses:
Final thoughts
Today’s puzzles lean toward tricky spellings and some colloquial forms, so expect a mix of familiar nouns, past-tense verbs, and less-common letter clusters. Overall difficulty sits at moderate — a few deceptive spellings make the set memorable.
Discussion