Wordle #1790 Difficulty: Medium

Wordle Hint Today: Hints, Clues & Answer for Wordle #1790

Treat this like a daily solve coach: open hints in order when you are stuck, read what each layer is trying to teach, then follow a short game plan before you touch the optional reveal.

If you’re hunting for a Wordle hint today, the point is not to rush to the last line on the page—it is to get unstuck while keeping the “aha” moment yours. For Wordle #1790 (May 14, 2026), you get clues you can reveal one at a time, plus short commentary on how to use each clue so the page still reads like practice notes after you finish.

Expect a solve where information per guess matters more than vibes: narrow vowels early, treat yellows as placement puzzles, and let grays do the heavy lifting of shrinking the alphabet. When you are ready for closure, the reveal at the bottom stays hidden until you choose it.

Another day’s puzzle? Browse the full daily Wordle archive for write-ups by date.

Today’s Wordle Overview

Today’s puzzle sits in the medium range: the answer is an everyday word, but a few plausible consonant paths can burn guesses if you do not force the keyboard to contradict you early.

There are no repeated letters, so duplicates are a dead end—use each row to test new letters or to pin down where a known letter must sit.

If you like a structured rhythm, treat the page like a worksheet: overview first, then hints, then the step list, and only then the tiles—skipping ahead is fine, but each section is written to reduce wasted guesses.

New to Wordle? Read the quick rules in How to Play.

Wordle Hints Today

Hint 1 Meaning

Hint 2 Letters

Hint 3 Pattern Logic

How to use these hints (without spoiling yourself)

  • Hint 1 (meaning): Use it when you have letters but cannot see a real English word yet. If meaning feels too strong, skip it until after guess two.
  • Hint 2 (letters): Use it to sanity-check the vowel budget and duplicates—fast to apply and rarely “over-clues” the solve.
  • Hint 3 (pattern): Use it when you are oscillating between two boards that share the same letters—this hint is about layout discipline, not vocabulary trivia.

Letter Breakdown for Today’s Wordle

  • Vowel profile: Exactly two vowel letters show up, which usually means one early vowel anchor changes the whole board.
  • Repeats: No doubles—if you are mentally allowing a pair “for style,” reset: each letter is unique.
  • Pattern shape: Consonants and vowels trade positions in an orderly way—useful for rejecting guesses that bunch vowels together.

How to Solve Today’s Wordle Step by Step

  1. Play an opener that splits vowels across two spots and hits high-frequency consonants—your goal is a split keyboard, not a lucky green.
  2. After row one, chase new letters unless a yellow forces a placement experiment—medium words punish “almost” boards.
  3. When two vowels are active, test them in different columns on purpose; yellow vowels are cheaper to resolve than yellow consonants.
  4. Before your fifth guess, list every consonant still allowed and eliminate the ones that break the shape rules you trust.
  5. Lock the answer only when every letter is consistent with greens, yellows, and grays—if one slot still has two candidates, spend a row to falsify one.

What Does Today’s Word Mean?

The sense of the word is conversational: you might use it when someone’s tone or courage seems to shift under pressure—not a niche scientific term or a brand name.

Tip: Treat meaning as a checksum. If your candidate letters spell a valid Wordle word but the definition feels off, you probably have the wrong consonant in a yellow slot.

Today’s Wordle Difficulty

This puzzle reads medium because the letter set is friendly, yet several consonants can look “reasonable” in more than one slot until you force a discriminating guess.

Streak risk usually shows up around guess four: the board looks half-solved, but two parallel solutions still exist—use the pattern hint or a targeted falsification guess instead of repeating the same shape.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Chasing greens on row two when yellows still have multiple homes—sometimes a “worse” score gives better information.
  • Treating a yellow vowel like it is solved without trying the other open vowel positions.
  • Letting a catchy partial word (“it sounds right”) override a gray letter you already earned.
  • Spending three rows on the same consonant skeleton instead of swapping one slot to break a tie.

Ready for the answer?

Tap a square to reveal one letter, or use the button to reveal the full word at once.