Wordle #1795 Difficulty: Medium

Wordle Hint Today: Hints, Clues & Answer for Wordle #1795

Your daily solve coach for puzzle #1795: a familiar adjective, but the lone vowel and the ending letter punish guess-by-vibe play. Open each hint in order, use the letter breakdown and steps below, then reveal the answer only when you want confirmation.

If you want a Wordle hint today without spoiling the word upfront, you are in the right place. For Wordle #1795 (May 19, 2026), each expandable clue below pushes you toward meaning, letter set, and slot discipline—work through them in order so the finish still feels earned.

Today’s puzzle plays medium: the answer is everyday English (something you might say about a room or old gear), not a trendy starter word. Only one vowel appears, nothing repeats, and the last letter often signals an adjective. A vowel-heavy opener helps; then chase where that single vowel can sit and whether the first consonant is already locked green.

Missed yesterday's Wordle? See May 18, 2026 (LOATH) for the full write-up.

Today’s Wordle Overview

Today sits in the medium band: the word is common in speech, yet the Y ending and a single middle vowel make random five-letter guesses wasteful.

No repeated letters—every gray tile is permanent. If your opener shows no vowel hit, pivot to words that test U in the center slots rather than loading the first position with another vowel.

New to Wordle? Read our guide in How to Solve Wordle.

Wordle Hints Today

Hint 1 Meaning

Hint 2 Letters

Hint 3 Pattern Logic

How to use these hints (without spoiling yourself)

  • Hint 1 (meaning): Open after guess two if you are stuck on nouns. Today points at how a room or object looks or feels, not what it is called.
  • Hint 2 (letters): Use once you know only one vowel is in play—stop testing words with A/E/I/O stacks. Confirm no repeated letters before you burn a guess on a double-consonant word.
  • Hint 3 (pattern): Save for when the vowel is yellow but order feels wrong. Test frames with a strong opening consonant pair and an adjective-style ending before you try exotic spellings.

Letter Breakdown for Today’s Wordle

  • Vowel profile: One vowel only—think about which slot your yellow vowel tile is begging you to fix.
  • Repeats: None. Every letter is unique, so a gray letter never comes back.
  • Pattern shape: Heavy consonant start, vowel tucked inside, and a suffix letter that often tags adjectives in English.
  • Common traps: Words with two vowels or a vowel in position one mislead today; lean on feedback before you chase “clean” looking words.

How to Solve Today’s Wordle Step by Step

  1. Guess 1: Use a vowel-rich opener (e.g. words that hit E, A, and common consonants) so you learn whether today’s lone vowel is already on the board.
  2. Guess 2: If only one vowel lights up, try a word that places that vowel in the middle and tests a D- or ST-heavy frame—today rewards consonant clusters more than vowel spam.
  3. Guess 3+: Lock the ending pattern once yellows hint at the last letter, then swap middle consonants that still respect every gray tile.
  4. Confirmation: Before you submit, read the word as a description of a room or object; if it does not sound like a condition, rethink the frame.

What Does Today’s Word Mean?

After you have most tiles green, ask whether your word could describe an old basement, a forgotten jacket in the closet, or air that has not been stirred—both literal and figurative uses are fair game.

Tip: Peek at the reveal section only when you want the dictionary sense spelled out; the hints above stay vague on purpose.

Today’s Wordle Difficulty

We rate today medium: the vocabulary is familiar, but solvers who treat every Y-ending word as rare lose a guess, and the single U punishes A-heavy openers that show no yellow vowel at all.

It is easier than yesterday’s less common adjective, yet harder than a straight S-T-A-R-E style solve because the consonant frame is less stereotyped.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Chasing the noun for household grit instead of the adjective form—today’s answer describes a state, not the powder itself.
  • Assuming two vowels because the word “looks short”; feedback usually shows only one vowel hit across several guesses.
  • Ignoring a green or yellow Y at the end and trying consonant endings like -T or -E instead.
  • Repeating consonants even after grays prove a letter is out—there is no double letter to discover today.

Ready for the answer?

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