Quick tips before you dive in
Spanish Wordle rolled out two different puzzles for July 10, 2026: the classic five-letter challenge and a variant that accepts accented words (which today happens to be six letters). If you want to keep the fun, stop reading now — spoilers are coming.
If you’re still trying to solve it solo, start with a guess that uses no repeated letters and packs in at least two vowels and three consonants. In Spanish, S, R, M, N and L show up a lot, so they’re solid choices.
Remember the color rules: keep greens, move yellows around, and ditch grays. Short, smart adjustments after each try beat blind spamming every time.
Regular Wordle (#1646) — clues and answer
Clue 1: It’s a masculine singular adjective.
Clue 2: The word has five letters: two consonants and three vowels.
Clue 3: One letter appears twice.
Clue 4: It starts and finishes with a vowel, and the middle letter is I.
Clue 5: The vowels E, A and U are not in the word; O is used (up to twice).
Clue 6: It’s related to sheep — think barnyard, not fantasy lore.
Spoiler time (don’t say we didn’t warn you): the answer is OVINO.
Why this matters: if you’d locked in the I in the middle and had a couple Os, this one becomes obvious. It’s a good example of how vowel placement can brutally narrow your options.
Wordle with accents (#1593) — clues and answer
Clue 1: Today’s accented puzzle is a feminine singular noun.
Clue 2: It’s made of six letters — three consonants and three vowels — and one letter repeats.
Clue 3: The word starts with S, ends in a vowel, and contains an accented second letter.
Clue 4: The vowels O, E and U are excluded; the vowel A appears once or twice.
Clue 5: The meaning points to a verse or prose form aimed at mocking or criticizing — think literary snark.
Final spoiler: the accented answer is SÁTIRA.
Quick wrap: OVINO and SÁTIRA are very different vibes — pastoral adjective vs. biting satire — which made today’s pair entertaining for players. Folks on socials were sharing their clever near-misses and groaning at obvious oversights, as usual.
Extra context: Wordle was made by Josh Wardle and blew up in 2022 before being picked up by The New York Times. Its simplicity spawned dozens of playful offshoots, so if you like puzzles with a twist, the Wordle family has plenty to keep you busy.



