Today’s Wordle hints and answer – solution #1,511, August 10

Wordle Hints, Answer & Help for Nov. 30, 2025 (#1625)

Written by Anish – TechBoltX | Updated: November 30, 2025

Overview — Wordle #1625 (Nov. 30, 2025)

Wordle #1625 is one of those deceptively simple but tricky puzzles. Single-vowel words with a repeated consonant often cause false leads, and adding the sometimes-vowel Y narrows things down fast. Below are five spoiler-free hints followed by the final answer, recent solutions, and solving strategies for this pattern.


Today’s Wordle Hints (Nov. 30)

Hint 1 — Repeated letter

There is one repeated letter in today’s answer.

Hint 2 — Vowels

The word contains one normal vowel and one sometimes vowel (Y).

Hint 3 — Starting letter

It begins with M.

Hint 4 — Ending letter

It ends with Y.

Hint 5 — Meaning

Describes weather that is warm, sticky, and unpleasantly humid.


Today’s Wordle Answer (Nov. 30, 2025 — Puzzle #1625)

???? MUGGY

“MUGGY” fits every clue: one vowel (U), repeated G, ends with Y, and perfectly describes humid, sticky weather conditions.


Yesterday’s Wordle (Nov. 29, #1624)

GRUFF


Recent Wordle Answers

  • Nov. 25 (#1620): PLEAD
  • Nov. 26 (#1621): HOVEL
  • Nov. 27 (#1622): REMIT
  • Nov. 28 (#1623): COLIC
  • Nov. 29 (#1624): GRUFF

Quick Strategy Tip

When a Wordle includes only one vowel, try swapping in Y and doubling common consonants like G, L, S, R, T. Words ending in -Y often fit this shared pattern. “MUGGY” becomes much easier to spot once you test the structure M _ G G Y.


FAQ — Wordle (Nov. 30, 2025)

Q: Is Wordle the same puzzle for everyone?

A: Yes — all players get the same daily Wordle worldwide.

Q: When does Wordle reset?

A: Every day at midnight UTC.

Q: Where can I play Wordle?

A: On the New York Times Wordle page or in the NYT Games app.


Written by Anish Puzzle Expert at TechBoltX

Anish is a dedicated puzzle strategist at TechBoltX, trusted by thousands of daily readers to deliver accurate Wordle guides and quick solutions. Known for his streak-saving hints and clear breakdowns, Anish transforms complex puzzles into solvable wins. He covers everything from daily NYT games to emerging logic puzzles, ensuring you never have to break a sweat—or your streak.

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