Reading: Wordle By The New York Times No. 1,820 answer starts with Q

Wordle By The New York Times No. 1,820 answer starts with Q

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for June 13 landed with a new clue set and answer for No. 1,820, and the solution begins with Q. The five-letter word repeats one letter, includes two vowels and means to stop or put an end to something.

That is the kind of puzzle that sends players hunting for the day’s finish line quickly, because the opening letter is one of the rarest in the game. Wordle No. 1,820 follows June 12’s No. 1819, when the answer was BREAK, so the daily pattern has kept moving without pause even as the letters change sharply from one day to the next.

The timing matters because Wordle resets every day with a fresh answer, and June 13 was the day this puzzle set arrived for players looking to keep a streak alive or recover one. The guidance around it also stays practical: starter words that lean heavy on E, A and R can help, while Z, J and Q are better left out early unless the grid gives a reason to bring them in.

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That advice creates the puzzle’s small contradiction. The answer’s first letter is a rare one, but the same rare letter is part of the help players are given. In other words, the clue narrows the field while still asking solvers to work for the rest of it, and the repetition and vowel count do most of the rest of the lifting.

The broader frame is simple enough. Wordle remains a daily game built around a new answer and hints each day, while related coverage also stretches across , , and . For June 13, the key takeaway is already fixed: No. 1,820 starts with Q, and that rare opening letter is the fastest route into the solution.

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