Quordle is the four-board word-guessing game where players solve four five-letter words in parallel. It offers Classic, Chill and Extreme modes. Today’s puzzle set includes a few tricky spellings and deceptively similar words that can mislead guesses — so the hints below focus on patterns and usage without giving answers away.

Quordle Classic Hints and Answers: 9 December 2025

Word A
  • Often describes someone or something a bit eccentric or flavored with a playful sense of excess.
  • Contains a repeated consonant near the middle.
  • Rhymes with words like "putty" and "crusty" (not exact rhyme).
  • Commonly used in casual speech about flavors or behavior.
Word B
  • A noun for someone accused or convicted of a crime.
  • Starts with the same letter as "family" and ends with the same letter as "son."
  • Appears in legal and news contexts regularly.
  • Four consonants and one vowel; stress on the first syllable.
Word C
  • Refers to a poisonous substance or contaminant.
  • Letter pattern: consonant-vowel-consonant-consonant-vowel (think short vowel sound).
  • Common in scientific, medical, and safety warnings.
  • Often paired with words like "exposure" or "remove."
Word D
  • Describes language that uses many words or is overly descriptive.
  • Ends with the same two letters as "ready."
  • Often applied to writing or speakers who favor verbosity.
  • Could be used as a mild critique in editing contexts.

Quordle Classic answers today

Answers:
NUTTY, FELON, TOXIN, WORDY

Quordle Chill Hints and Answers: 9 December 2025

Word A
  • Often refers to an older person or something relating to age.
  • Begins with the same letter as "expert" and shares a common suffix for nouns.
  • Frequently appears in family or genealogical contexts.
  • Five letters; two syllables when spoken.
Word B
  • A simple past tense; also a verb form indicating upright position.
  • Letters form a double-o pattern in the middle.
  • Common in everyday narration and simple past-tense descriptions.
  • Often pairs with prepositions like "up" or "over" in short phrases.
Word C
  • A mythic or folkloric being often seen in dark tales.
  • Starts with the same consonant as "dog" and ends with the same letter as "man."
  • Appears in literature, games, and movies as an antagonist.
  • Single-word usage frequently conveys menace or temptation.
Word D
  • A hard, sedimentary rock used historically for starting fires.
  • Often found in toolmaking or early industry references.
  • Short, punchy five-letter noun with one syllable.
  • Common in survival or primitive-tech contexts.

Quordle Chill answers today

Answers:
ELDER, STOOD, DEMON, FLINT

Quordle Extreme Hints and Answers: 9 December 2025

Word A
  • A past-tense verb meaning increased in size or matured.
  • Shares its first letter with "garden" and ends with the same letter as "own."
  • Common in growth or development contexts.
  • Four consonants and one vowel, with a regular pronunciation.
Word B
  • A verb meaning to remove hair or to make something smooth by cutting.
  • Starts with the same consonant as "she" and has a short vowel sound.
  • Used both for grooming and for a mild surgical action in some contexts.
  • Often appears in barbershop or kitchen tool descriptions.
Word C
  • A rice dish of Middle Eastern or South Asian origin; also a standalone noun for a seasoned grain dish.
  • Five letters, vowel-consonant-vowel pattern in the middle.
  • Frequently mentioned in recipes and restaurant menus.
  • Ends with the same letter as "chef."
Word D
  • A common noun for goods on hand or shares in a store context.
  • Begins with the same consonant as "stone" and ends with the same letter as "back."
  • Used in both commerce and agriculture.
  • Also appears as a verb meaning to supply or store.

Quordle Extreme answers today

Answers:
GROWN, SHAVE, PILAF, STOCK

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 set leans on common nouns and verbs but hides them with similar patterns and sounds. Overall difficulty is moderate — expect one or two words to feel deceptive while the others fall to logical pattern play.