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: 21 November 2025

Word A hints
  • A short, bright flash often used literally or to mean the start of something.
  • Begins with S and ends with K.
  • Contains a three-letter sequence that rhymes with “bark.”
  • Commonly used in phrases about inspiration or ignition.
Word B hints
  • A snag, problem, or brief delay — also a verb meaning to fasten.
  • Starts with H and finishes with H.
  • Rhymes with “itch,” making its vowel sound easy to spot.
  • Often appears in travel or relationship idioms (“hitched”).
Word C hints
  • A slow-moving marshy waterway typical of the southern United States.
  • Begins with B and ends with a vowel uncommon in English words.
  • The middle letters form a soft, two-syllable cadence.
  • Geographic term seen in regional writing and place names.
Word D hints
  • A characteristic or distinguishing quality, often used in psychology or biology.
  • Starts and ends with the same consonant letter.
  • Contains the letter pattern that frequently appears in descriptive words.
  • Common in discussions about personality and genetics.
Click to reveal the CLASSIC QUORDLE answer

Answers: SPARK, HITCH, BAYOU, TRAIT

Quordle Chill Hints and Answers: 21 November 2025

Word A hints
  • A noun for an organized list or pointer, often found at the back of a book.
  • Five letters, begins with I and ends with X.
  • Common in academic and reference contexts.
  • Letter pattern ends with an uncommon consonant for five-letter words.
Word B hints
  • Can be a small timepiece or the act of observing.
  • Starts with W and finishes with H.
  • Contains the consonant cluster that often appears in action verbs.
  • Frequently used in daily conversation and fashion contexts.
Word C hints
  • A storage box or the front torso area; common noun with two main meanings.
  • Begins with C and ends with T.
  • Contains a short vowel followed by a crisp consonant blend.
  • Appears in medical, furniture, and treasure-related contexts.
Word D hints
  • A dwelling or a legislative body; basic common noun.
  • Starts with H and ends with E.
  • Five-letter word with a vowel pair separated by consonants.
  • Very common in everyday language and idioms.
Click to reveal the CHILL QUORDLE answers

Answers: OLDER, WATCH, CHEST, HOUSE

Quordle Extreme Hints and Answers: 21 November 2025

Word A hints
  • A verb meaning to state an opinion or to suggest.
  • Five letters, begins with a vowel and ends with a silent-like vowel.
  • Common in editorial or conversational contexts: “to ____.”
  • Letter pattern places the emphasis on the middle syllable sound.
Word B hints
  • Someone who acts on behalf of another; often used in business or espionage.
  • Begins with A and ends with T.
  • Contains a soft consonant followed by a common suffix.
  • Common in job titles and legal contexts.
Word C hints
  • Molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface; geological term.
  • Begins with M and ends with A.
  • The word has repeating consonant-vowel rhythm.
  • Used in science writing about volcanism and geology.
Word D hints
  • To lift or raise, typically with mechanical help.
  • Starts with H and ends with T.
  • Contains a diphthong-like vowel sound in the middle.
  • Common in construction, shipping, and mechanical contexts.
Click to reveal the EXTREME QUORDLE answers

Answers: AGENT, IGLOO, MAGMA, HOIST

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.

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.