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Today’s NYT worm information, answer and help for February 26, #1348-Cnet

Looking for that Last Worm response? Click here to click today’s worms and our daily answers and information for the New York Times Mini Crosswort, Connections: Sports Edition and Strang’s puzzles.


Today’s worm puzzle is a common word with rather widespread letters. But the starting letter is one that I usually appear as in the second or third position and the word does not begin. If you need clues and the answer, read on.

Today’s worms

Before we show you today’s worm response, we will give you some information. If you don’t want a spoiler, look away now.

Wurm Note No. 1: Repetitions

Today’s worm response has a repeated letter.

Wurm Note No. 2: Vocal

There is a vowel in today’s worm response, but it is the repeated letter, so you will see it twice.

Whordle Tip No. 3: Start letter

Today’s worm response begins with the letter A.

Wurm Note No. 4: Part of the language

Today’s worm response can be a noun or a verb.

Wurm Note No. 5: Meaning

Today’s worm response can refer to a price or honor, and also to the act of awarding such a price.

Today’s worm response

Today’s worm response is the award.

Yesterday’s worm response

Yesterday’s worm response on February 25th No. 1347 was dryer.

Current worm answers

February 21st No. 1343: Nelke

February 22nd No. 1344: cream

February 23rd No. 1345: Otter

February 24 No. 1346: gland

Will the worm go out?

When wormfell began, the creator Josh Wardle used a list of words with five letters that he had shared with his partner, and only selected the words they recognized. While this is more than 2,000 words, more than half of them have already been used.

The worm editor Tracy Bennett admitted that at some point the game had to get a grip on the fact that the word list is not eternal.

“One possibility is that we can recycle old words at some point, as if we are getting to the end,” Bennett said to a worm player on Tikkok.

She also said the editors could throw all the words back in and reuse them or allow plural or past form, which is not done now.

Bennett did not comment, but it seems possible that Wurm could also expand on words with six letters. Options are available.

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