Today’s Wordle leans on a common everyday verb, but it can still burn through guesses if you don’t lock down the vowels quickly. If you’re trying to protect your streak, start with a broad opener, narrow the letter set, then use the targeted hints below before scrolling to the full solution.
Key facts for today’s Wordle (#1620, November 25, 2025)
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Game number | Wordle #1620 |
| Date | November 25, 2025 |
| Word length | 5 letters |
| Part of speech | Verb |
| Vowels | Two different vowels |
| Duplicate letters | None |
| Difficulty | Moderate (around four guesses on average) |
Letter-pattern hints for Wordle #1620
If you want to reason your way to the solution, start with the structural clues:
- The word has two vowels.
- Those vowels are different, not a double.
- The word starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant.
- No letter appears more than once.
That already rules out a lot of common traps like double letters at the end or words with a repeated vowel in the middle.
Semantic hints for today’s Wordle
Once you’ve got a few letters on the board, the meaning-based hints should help you commit to a line of guesses:
- The answer is a verb.
- It describes making an earnest request or argument.
- Close synonyms include “beg” and “argue”.
- It’s used a lot in legal or formal settings, but also in everyday speech.
Think of what someone does in court, or what you might do when you’re trying very hard to change someone’s mind.
Shape and anagram hints (without the exact word)
If you’re down to a few guesses and still not there, these pattern clues narrow it further without immediately exposing the solution:
- The word follows a consonant-heavy pattern with only two vowel positions.
- Rearranging the letters can spell a common mode of transportation.
- If you swap the first two letters, you get another valid English word.
Working with those hints alongside your current grid should let you test one or two smart candidates instead of firing off random verbs.
Recommended starter and follow-up words
For this puzzle, broad openers that hit multiple common vowels and frequent consonants pay off. Examples that line up well with today’s answer include:
| Guess | Why it helps today |
|---|---|
| APPLE | Probes A, E, and common consonants; quickly confirms or eliminates key letters. |
| PEDAL | Introduces P, D, L and both A and E in one shot, very close to today’s layout. |
| PLEAT | Tests P, L, E, A together and gives you most of the final answer’s skeleton. |
Tip: if a word like PLEAT lights up almost entirely green or yellow, pay attention to how those letters can be re-ordered into another verb with a similar meaning.
Today’s Wordle answer for November 25, 2025 (#1620)
If you only came for the solution or you’ve run out of rows, here it is.
Today’s Wordle answer is:
PLEAD
What “PLEAD” means
PLEAD is a verb with a couple of closely related uses:
- To appeal or entreat earnestly: to ask for something with serious emotion or urgency.
- To use arguments or persuasion for or against something: to make a case, often in a formal context.
In legal language, someone might “plead guilty” or “plead not guilty”. Outside a courtroom, you might “plead with a friend to stay” or “plead for more time”. That blend of emotional request and structured argument makes it a neat fit for a midweek Wordle.
If today’s puzzle cost you more guesses than you’d like, the main takeaway is that consonant-heavy verbs with flexible anagrams respond well to methodical testing: lock in your vowels early, avoid repeating eliminated letters, and, when several positions are solved, spend a guess on a word that reorganizes those same letters into a new configuration before you panic about your streak.