Quordle is a four-board word puzzle with three play modes: Classic, Chill, and Extreme. Each day brings a fresh set of four answers per mode, and today’s puzzle set includes a few tricky spellings and deceptively simple-looking words that can mislead you if you rely only on obvious guesses.

Quordle Classic Hints and Answers: 14 November

Word A hints

• Means unusually tall and thin; often used for a person or animal.
• Contains a single long vowel sound in the stressed syllable.
• Ends with a common consonant that can also start words like “yard.”
• Rhymes with words like “spanky” (without revealing spelling).

Word B hints
  • A past tense action related to a joint or striking with the knee.
  • Features a double vowel in the middle.
  • Often appears in phrases describing physical contact or injury.
  • Sounds identical to a common verb about wanting something urgently.
Word C hints

• A visual representation; used for data or navigation.
• Begins with the same consonant as “chair.”
• Commonly paired with words like “bar,” “flow,” or “price.”
• Four letters follow a single initial—simple, familiar pattern.

Word D hints

• Refers to gradual breakdown or rot, often used for teeth or structures.
• Two-syllable word with an short-first-syllable stress pattern.
• Often used in scientific or descriptive contexts about deterioration.
• Ends with the same letter that closes “day.”

Click to reveal the CLASSIC QUORDLE answer

Answers: LANKY, KNEED, CHART, DECAY

Quordle Chill Hints and Answers: 14 November 2025

Word A hints

• Describes extreme or fanatical behavior; also a medical condition for animals.
• Starts with the same letter as “run.”
• Often used figuratively to describe intense enthusiasm or aggression.
• Ends with a consonant that commonly finishes many past-participles.

Word B hints

• A small push or hint to get someone to act.
• Begins with a nasal consonant and ends with a soft affricate sound.
• Commonly used in casual conversation about persuasion or subtle prompts.
• Rhymes with “budge.”

Word C hints

• A small unit of weight, sometimes used figuratively to mean a little amount.
• Contains a vowel-plus-consonant ending that appears in other measurement words.
• Often appears in recipes or weight descriptions.
• First letter is a vowel that can also start words like “open.”

Word D hints

• Past participle often describing something filled with air or ruined.
• Sounds like a common verb in its past tense form.
• Frequently used in weather or mechanical contexts.
• Ends with the same letter as “town.”

Click to reveal the CHILL QUORDLE answers

Answers: RABID, NUDGE, OUNCE, BLOWN

Quordle Extreme Hints and Answers: 14 November

Word A hints

• A conflict between people or groups; can be physical or verbal.
• Short, forceful one-syllable word often used in headlines.
• Begins with the same consonant as “fine.”
• Often pairs with prepositions like “in” or “to” in common phrases.

Word B hints

• A cut of meat commonly grilled or pan-seared.
• Contains a vowel-consonant cluster that can be spelled differently in other words.
• Often ordered by doneness in restaurants.
• Rhymes with “break.”

Word C hints

• Prefix relating to water; also used as a standalone shorthand in energy contexts.
• Four of its five letters are consonant-vowel-consonant-vowel pattern.
• Common in scientific and utility-related terms.
• Starts with the same letter as “high.”

Word D hints

• Means “approximately” when referring to dates or times.
• Often appears before a year in historical references.
• Five-letter word with an internal consonant cluster and ending vowel.
• Starts with the same consonant as “circle.”

Click to reveal the EXTREME QUORDLE answers

Answers: FIGHT, STEAK, HYDRO, CIRCA

How to solve Quordle effectively

  1. Start with strong openers:
    Use two starting words that include all vowels and frequent consonants (like “SLATE” and “ROUND”).
  2. Observe all boards together:
    Don’t focus on one grid. Use shared letters that appear across multiple puzzles.
  3. Prioritize greens and shared yellows:
    Locked positions can reveal useful patterns for other words.
  4. Avoid repeating letters too soon:
    Test new characters early to eliminate possibilities efficiently.
  5. Focus on letter patterns:
    Common endings like “-ING,” “-ED,” or “-LY” can help solve multiple boards faster.
  6. Work from the easiest to hardest:
    Finish simpler words first to unlock overlapping clues for the remaining puzzles.
  7. Stay calm on the last guesses:
    Extreme mode can trick you with rare letters; use elimination logic carefully.

All Answers Quordle Classic: 14 November 2025

Screenshot by: NerdsChalk

All Answers Quordle Chill: 14 November 2025

Screenshot by: NerdsChalk

All Answers Quordle Extreme: 14 November 2025

Screenshot by: NerdsChalk

Final thoughts

Today’s set mixes avoidant verbs, everyday nouns, and weather/texture adjectives—plus a couple of words with spellings that can trip you up. Difficulty sits at moderate: a few quick hits, a couple of deceptive choices, and one or two boards that reward careful pattern work.