Easy scenarios
SH starts are easy when S and H are green early and the third-position vowel is known.
They are also easy when your opener already removed A or E, because the vowel family narrows.
SH starts are powerful clues because they fix a consonant pair before the vowel is known.
What SH___ tells you and why it matters during a Wordle solve.
A confirmed SH start immediately gives the answer a strong frame. S is one of the best opening letters in Wordle, and H narrows the next step into a recognizable family of words: SHAKE, SHARE, SHARP, SHEAR, SHELL, SHIFT, SHINE, SHOCK, SHORE, and SHOUT.
The pattern matters because the third letter often decides the direction. SHA-, SHE-, SHI-, SHO-, and SHU- families behave differently. Once SH is green, a good player stops hunting random letters and starts testing the vowel plus the final two consonants.
Pattern work is strongest when it stays connected to the actual board. Use the pattern to organize candidates, then let green, yellow, and gray tiles decide whether you should solve directly or spend one more turn splitting the remaining group.
How often this shape should influence your decisions.
SH starts are common enough that a green S first plus yellow H should make you consider placing H second. The pair is especially important after openers that test S but miss H.
Because the first two positions are fixed, candidate reduction comes from the vowel and ending. A, E, I, O, and U all matter, but the best next guess depends on which letters have already been removed.
Frequency is a guide, not a shortcut. A common pattern can still be wrong if the positions do not fit, and a less common pattern can become the best explanation once several high-frequency letters are removed.
Representative Wordle-style words grouped by the way they behave on the board.
| Group | Examples | Why the group matters |
|---|---|---|
| SHA words | SHAKE, SHARE, SHARP, SHADE, SHAME | A in position three creates several familiar candidates that need final-letter separation. |
| SHE and SHI words | SHEAR, SHELL, SHIFT, SHINE, SHIED | E and I families often require careful checking of L, R, F, N, and T. |
| SHO and SHU words | SHOCK, SHORE, SHOUT, SHOWN, SHUCK | O and U families are less broad but can survive A/E-heavy openers. |
When this pattern is clean, and when it becomes a trap.
SH starts are easy when S and H are green early and the third-position vowel is known.
They are also easy when your opener already removed A or E, because the vowel family narrows.
SH starts are hard when SH is fixed but every major vowel remains possible.
The pattern can also trap hard-mode players when SHARE, SHARP, SHADE, and SHAKE all remain close.
The mistakes that usually cost a turn with this pattern.
Do not use all your guesses checking one SHA candidate after another.
Remember that SH can also appear at the end, so a yellow S and H pair does not prove the start.
Watch for duplicate letters in words like SHELL.
How to confirm the pattern and decide between solving and splitting.
| Step | Decision |
|---|---|
| 1 | After SH is confirmed, solve the third letter first. The vowel usually creates the biggest split. |
| 2 | Then test final consonants. R, P, K, D, M, L, F, T, N, C, and W cover many SH-start candidates. |
| 3 | In hard mode, keep SH fixed and choose words that change both the vowel and one final consonant whenever possible. |
Board-style situations that show how to use the pattern without guessing blindly.
| Board clue | What it teaches | Best next move |
|---|---|---|
| SLATE -> G----, CHORD -> -Y--- | S is fixed first and H is active, so SH is a likely start to test. | Try a legal SH word that identifies the vowel, such as SHORE or SHAKE depending on grays. |
| RAISE -> --Y-Y, SHARE -> GGG-- | SHA is confirmed and the final two positions carry the solve. | Separate SHARE, SHARP, SHADE, SHAKE, and SHAME with known final-letter evidence. |
| POINT -> --Y--, SHOCK -> GGG-- | SHO is likely and C/K become important. | Check SHOCK, SHOWN, SHORE, or SHOUT based on remaining letters. |
Use pattern recognition with candidate reduction, not instead of it.
A pattern page is most useful after you already have a few strong clues. If you are still early in the puzzle, broad information words from Best Starting Words or the Starting Word Analyzer usually matter more than chasing one shape. Once the board suggests SH___, the goal changes: identify the family, avoid duplicate traps, and decide whether a direct answer or a splitter gives the highest chance of finishing cleanly.
For live solving, the Wordle ソルバー can filter green, yellow, and gray constraints. For finished games, Wordle アナライザー helps you review whether your pattern guess actually reduced the candidate pool. Pair both tools with Wordle Statistics and 今日の Wordle ヒント when you want a broader solving workflow.
Move between similar pattern problems when your board points somewhere else.
Short answers for common questions about this topic.