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Delete Word of the day – Quiz Games from iPhone.

To delete Word of the day from your iPhone, Follow these steps:

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Method 2:

Go to Settings and click on General then click on «iPhone Storage». You will then scroll down to see the list of all the apps installed on your iPhone. Tap on the app you want to uninstall and delete the app.

For iOS 11 and above:

Go into your Settings and click on «General» and then click on iPhone Storage. You will see the option «Offload Unused Apps». Right next to it is the «Enable» option. Click on the «Enable» option and this will offload the apps that you don’t use.

Delete Word of the day – Quiz Games from Android

  1. First open the Google Play app, then press the hamburger menu icon on the top left corner.
  2. After doing these, go to «My Apps and Games» option, then go to the «Installed» option.
  3. You’ll see a list of all your installed apps on your phone.
  4. Now choose Word of the day – Quiz Games, then click on «uninstall».
  5. Also you can specifically search for the app you want to uninstall by searching for that app in the search bar then select and uninstall.

how to cancel Word of the Day・English Vocab

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Table of Contents:

  1. Cancel on iphone
  2. Cancel on android
  3. Cancel on Paypal
  4. Cancel via Email
  5. Cancel on Website

cancel Word of the Day・English Vocab subscription  
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Word of the Day・English Vocab App Cancellation and Delete Guide

There are a few things you must know about cancelling subscriptions. They include the following:

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We have made it super easy to cancel word of the day・english vocab subscription at the root to avoid any and all mediums «ADS PROJECTS GROUP LTD» (the developer) uses to bill you. Now let us get into the crux of this guide.


  1. How to unsubscribe from Word of the Day・English Vocab?
  2. How to cancel Word of the Day・English Vocab subscriptions on Paypal?
  3. How to delete Word of the Day・English Vocab from your iPhone or Android?
  4. What to do if your subscribed directly on Word of the Day・English Vocab’s website?


How to unsubscribe from Word of the Day・English Vocab?

It’s so easy to sign up for a service through an app, but unsubscribing can be a bit trickier. Are you wondering how to unsubscribe word of the day・english vocab account? Here’s everything you need to know about deleting a word of the day・english vocab account, read on.

How to cancel Word of the Day・English Vocab subscriptions on your iPhone or iPad?

  1. First, open the settings app and tap on your name.
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  3. Next, tap on your Apple ID. View Apple ID then sign in and scroll down to the «Subscriptions» button.
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How to cancel Word of the Day・English Vocab subscriptions on your Android device?

To cancel word of the day・english vocab subscription on Android, you need to realize that deleting the word of the day・english vocab app alone won’t cut it. Follow the steps below:

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To cancel word of the day・english vocab subscription on your Mac, do the following:

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Sometimes, you may find that you made a subscription through another company whether you were aware or not at the time of subscribing. To change this you might have to sign in the company’s website or directly reach out to the content provider. Generally, here are two steps you can take if you find yourself in that fix:

  1. Finding the company’s information, then reaching out. Word of the Day・English Vocab Feedback Form
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How to delete Word of the Day・English Vocab from your iPhone or Android?

Delete word of the day・english vocab from iPhone

  1. On your home screen, tap and hold word of the day・english vocab until it starts shaking.
  2. Once it starts to shake, you’ll see an X Mark at the top of the app icon.
  3. Click on that X to delete the word of the day・english vocab app from your phone.

Method 2: Go to Settings and click on General then click on «iPhone Storage». You will then scroll down to see the list of all the apps installed on your iPhone. Tap on the app you want to uninstall and delete the app.

Method 3: Go into your Settings and click on «General» and then click on iPhone Storage. You will see the option «Offload Unused Apps». Right next to it is the «Enable» option. Click on the «Enable» option and this will offload the apps that you don’t use.

Delete word of the day・english vocab from Android

  1. First open the Google Play app, then press the hamburger menu icon on the top left corner.
  2. After doing these, go to «My Apps and Games» option, then go to the «Installed» option.
  3. You’ll see a list of all your installed apps on your phone.
  4. Now choose word of the day・english vocab, then click on «uninstall».
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What to do if your subscribed directly on Word of the Day・English Vocab’s website?

Here’s how to cancel your word of the day・english vocab subscription when billed through a payments provider that is not the Appstore, Playstore or Paypal. Sometimes, you may start a subscription directly on a company’s website without using an extra layer of security like Paypal or Apple. To unsubscribe, you might have to sign in to word of the day・english vocab’s website or directly reach out to the payments provider. Generally, here are two steps you can take if you find yourself in that fix:

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Over recent years, we’ve seen the push for greater equality come in many shapes and forms – there have been the calls from Black Lives Matter protesters for an end to police brutality and racially-motivated violence against black people, the #MeToo movement has been campaigning against sexual abuse and harassment and has outed the worst offenders, and more and more people are calling for an end to discrimination against LGBTQ+ people. However, as the demand for more rights has increased, so too has the backlash against all of this. Much of the resistance to change is played out via social media, with particular buzzwords becoming vital weapons in the culture war.

I’ve already written about the word woke and the ways it’s now used to slap down those who speak out about social injustice. Today I’d like to explore the idea of cancel culture and look at how – and why – the word is generally used.

It’s a question that’s close to my heart as recently, when sharing a blog post about the positive discrimination that privileges certain EFL teachers because of where they were born, I was myself accused of encouraging ‘cancel culture on social media’, and warned that this ‘just divides different groups of people up even further’. I responded by pointing out that many job adverts are already discriminating on the basis of where applicants were born, which is incredibly divisive itself, and added that I struggled to see how commenting on this could create further division.

The argument raged on over another twenty or thirty comments, and went over plenty of very familiar ground. I was told that cancel culture and calling out people that you feel are guilty of discrimintion – criticizing them and challenging them to explain their words or actions – was encouraging aggression and anger; it would result in mobs of people rampaging around the Internet, completely out of control, hungry for blood – either metaphorically or even quite literally – and ultimately, it would lead to social breakdown and anarchy. When I tried to counter these arguments, I was then told that I was trying to cancel all disagreement – to prevent it from being aired, to stop any opposing voices from being heard. This frustrating exchange left me feeling that in this instance at least, ‘cancel culture’ seemed to be what people who don’t like anyone criticising discrimination call the criticism of discrimination.

Now, you may be thinking that this was simply an isolated incident, but a few days later, one of my in-laws forwarded on to me an article from the notoriously right-wing, Rupert Murdoch-owned New York Post. I was informed that “apparently, Beethoven is the bad guy now” and that “the woke PC mob want to cancel him”. I read the linked article – titled CANCELING BEETHOVEN IS THE LATEST WOKE MADNESS FOR THE CLASSICAL MUSIC WORLD – and it was full of the by-now familiar linguistic tropes: there were the hysterical descriptions of woke fascists, the cancelling of Western civilization, online mobs seeking to silence dissent, and much more. The article begins by praising Beethoven’s work – and why not – before going on to claim that academics want to ‘cancel’ the great man ….. and that this is all tied in with BLM.

Curious about what may have elicited such a heated tirade, I then read the original article it was responding to. What was most striking about it was the fact that nowhere did it call for Beethoven – or anyone else for that matter – to be ‘cancelled’. Instead, it simply argued that the reverence for Beethoven is rooted in a white, male, upper-class viewpoint . . . and that there’s a lot of other amazing music out there that’s not getting heard as a result of this elitist perspective. That’s it.

This all begs the question of who’s cancelling who here. Are the academics asking for fresh new composers to be added to the repertoire of different orchestras somehow guilty of cancel culture? Are they naming and shaming people? Is their critique an act of social censure? Or are these accusations being weaponised by upper-middle class white men in order to maintain their grip on power and shut down other voices?

I shall leave it to you to make up your own minds on that one.

Want to learn more with Lexical Lab? Take a summer course with us.

Work in pairs. Discuss these questions.

  • Which movements in your country have been pushing hardest for greater equality? Have they faced much of a backlash?
  • Have you heard any stories of (alleged) abusers being outed?
  • Have you heard any stories about police brutality anywhere?
  • Have you heard of any examples of companies or people getting named and shamed? Why?
  • How do you feel about the idea of calling out people that you feel have made offensive comments or done offensive things?
  • Do you think it’s actually possible to ‘cancel‘ people in the public eye? Can you give any examples?

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An extremely stupid word (i.e. Hungs, Masturbathe, Emotionap, etc.), that is almost certainly made up on the spot, that UD randomly puts on the front page and emails to all of its subscribers for no good reason at all. These «definitions» usually tend to be a pun or play on words and really don’t make much sense.

Every goddamn Word Of The Day that has ever existed on this site since 2004 has been so mind-numbingly stupid that I feel that I’ve lost at least 40 IQ points.

Get the Word of the Day mug.

  • Top Definitions
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  • Related Content
  • Canceled Vs. Cancelled
  • Examples
  • British

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


verb (used with object), can·celed, can·cel·ing or (especially British) can·celled, can·cel·ling.

to make void, as a contract or other obligation; annul: to cancel a hotel reservation;to cancel a magazine subscription.

to decide or announce that a planned event will not take place; call off: to cancel a meeting.

to mark or perforate (a postage stamp, admission ticket, etc.) so as to render invalid for reuse.

to neutralize; compensate for; counterbalance: His sincere apology canceled his sarcastic remark.

to publicly reject, boycott, or no longer support (a person or group) because of socially or morally unacceptable views or actions: Fans have been quick to cancel their favorite rapper or other celebrity.

Accounting.

  1. to close (an account) by crediting or paying all outstanding charges: He plans to cancel his account at the department store.
  2. to eliminate or offset (a debit, credit, etc.) with an entry for an equal amount on the opposite side of a ledger, as when a payment is received on a debt.

Mathematics. to eliminate by striking out a factor common to both the denominator and numerator of a fraction, equivalent terms on opposite sides of an equation, etc.

to cross out (words, letters, etc.) by drawing a line over the item.

Printing. to omit.

verb (used without object), can·celed, can·cel·ing or (especially British) can·celled, can·cel·ling.

to counterbalance or compensate for one another; become neutralized (often followed by out): The pros and cons cancel out.

Mathematics. (of factors common to both the denominator and numerator of a fraction, certain terms on opposite sides of an equation, etc.) to be equivalent; to allow cancellation.

noun

an act of canceling.

Printing, Bookbinding.

  1. an omitted passage, page, etc.
  2. a replacement for an omitted part.

VIDEO FOR CANCEL

What Does It Mean To Cancel Someone?

Canceling, today, is used like an informal boycott, usually on social media, when someone or something in the public eye is offensive … or when we’re just over them.

MORE VIDEOS FROM DICTIONARY.COM

QUIZ

CAN YOU ANSWER THESE COMMON GRAMMAR DEBATES?

There are grammar debates that never die; and the ones highlighted in the questions in this quiz are sure to rile everyone up once again. Do you know how to answer the questions that cause some of the greatest grammar debates?

Which sentence is correct?

Origin of cancel

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English cancellen, cansellen “to annul, revoke,” from Anglo-French canceler, from Old French chanceler “to cross out with X’s or parallel lines,” from Medieval Latin cancellāre “to cross out,” from Latin: “to make like a lattice,” derivative of cancellī “latticed barriers, gratings, grilles,” plural of cancellus; see cancellus

synonym study for cancel

3, 8. Cancel, delete, erase, obliterate indicate that something is no longer to be considered usable or in force. To cancel is to cross something out by stamping a mark over it, drawing lines through it, or the like: to cancel a stamp, a word. To delete is to cross something out from written matter or from matter to be printed, often in accordance with a printer’s or proofreader’s symbol indicating the material is to be omitted: to delete part of a line. To erase is to remove by scraping or rubbing: to erase a capital letter. To obliterate is to blot out entirely, so as to remove all sign or trace of: to obliterate a record.

OTHER WORDS FROM cancel

can·cel·a·ble; especially British, can·cel·la·ble, adjectivecan·cel·er; especially British, can·cel·ler, nounre·can·cel, verb (used with object), re·can·celed, re·can·cel·ing or (especially British) re·can·celled, re·can·cel·ling.self-can·celed, adjective

self-can·celled, adjectiveun·can·cel·a·ble, adjectiveun·can·celed, adjectiveun·can·cel·la·ble, adjectiveun·can·celled, adjective

Words nearby cancel

Canberra, can buoy, Canby, canc., cancan, cancel, cancel culture, canceled check, cancellate, cancellation, cancellation law

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

CANCELED VS. CANCELLED

What’s the difference between canceled and cancelled?

Canceled and cancelled are alternate forms of the past tense of the verb cancel.

Canceled is the primary spelling used in American English, while cancelled is the spelling used in British English and preferred in many locations, including in the U.K., Ireland, Australia, and Canada. Perhaps for this reason, cancelled is also occasionally used in American English.

This is part of a general British English spelling pattern in which a single letter L at the end of a verb is doubled when the verb is changed to form a different tense, such as by adding –ed for past tense or -ing for continuous tense. So cancelling is used in British English, while canceling is primarily used in American English. This same pattern applies for many words, such as counsel, but not all. When the stress falls on the final syllable, the L is usually doubled (the past tense of propel is typically spelled propelled, for example).

Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between canceled and cancelled.

Quiz yourself on canceled vs. cancelled!

True or False? 

The spelling cancelled is never used in American English.

Words related to cancel

abolish, abort, annul, break off, cut, destroy, eliminate, kill, remove, repeal, rescind, revoke, wipe out, rule out, abrogate, ax, break, countermand, deface, delete

How to use cancel in a sentence

  • This is a boon for accessibility for certain gamers with disabilities or those who just like their cancel button and accept button to be consistent across games.

  • The thing that people who decry cancel culture often miss is that the examples they use are people who haven’t actually been canceled.

  • Ad watchRepublican State Legislative Committee, “Cancel Cancel Culture Before the Left Cancels You.”

  • Polls suggest that a lot of voters currently don’t know what cancel culture is — and that’s true even among Republicans, despite the party’s elites talking about cancel culture nonstop.

  • What we now call cancel culture is the contentious nature of a free society wrestling with the respectable parameters of public speech.

  • Did he participate in his own extortion and cancel his plans for a big Christmas premiere?

  • My family is ready to mount an intervention, and cancel my streaming accounts.

  • Should we cancel gatherings, reunions, excursions, or throw ourselves into them with even more gratitude for one another?

  • Presumably, without those subsidies, most will just cancel their policies.

  • In a statement, the MoD admitted that it had been forced to cancel the rest of the training program.

  • A lease made by a minor is not void, but he may avoid or cancel it by some positive act.

  • Does a debtor who turns over a note to his creditor in payment, thereby cancel the debt?

  • Either of the parties might cancel the bond, but only after a formal and public notice of his intentions.

  • Mendelssohn wanted to cancel the excommunication on the ground that the church has no rights in civil matters.

  • The Law does not cancel the promise, but faith in the promised Christ cancels the Law.

British Dictionary definitions for cancel


verb -cels, -celling or -celled or US -cels, -celing or -celed (mainly tr)

to order (something already arranged, such as a meeting or event) to be postponed indefinitely; call off

to revoke or annulthe order for the new television set was cancelled

to delete (writing, numbers, etc); cross outhe cancelled his name and substituted hers

to mark (a cheque, postage stamp, ticket, etc) with an official stamp or by a perforation to prevent further use

(also intr usually foll by out) to counterbalance; make up for (a deficiency, etc)his generosity cancelled out his past unkindness

  1. to close (an account) by discharging any outstanding debts
  2. (sometimes foll by out) accounting to eliminate (a debit or credit) by making an offsetting entry on the opposite side of the account

maths

  1. to eliminate (numbers, quantities, or terms) as common factors from both the numerator and denominator of a fraction or as equal terms from opposite sides of an equation
  2. (intr) to be able to be eliminated in this way

noun

a new leaf or section of a book replacing a defective one, one containing errors, or one that has been omitted

Derived forms of cancel

canceller or US canceler, noun

Word Origin for cancel

C14: from Old French canceller, from Medieval Latin cancellāre, from Late Latin: to strike out, make like a lattice, from Latin cancellī lattice, grating

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

What is Word Of The Day?

always incredibly gay.

word of the day can lick my gooch!

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Word Of The Day — video


Word Of The Day — what is it?

Urban Dictionary staff’s way of pissing on right-wing groups and inventing slang that doesn’t exist and if so, was made obsolete in the weeks of it being created pre-2010s.

Example 1: «Check out the new Urban Dictionary Word of the Day!» an IRC chat message read. «Wait, what the fuck am I reading?» another IRC chat message read, this time from another user.

👍55 👎15


What does «Word Of The Day» mean?

Some deadass expression that literally nobody has heard of. 2021 is the year we cancel ‘Word of the Day’.

Nobody cares about the word of the day

👍247 👎51


Word Of The Day — what does it mean?

How Urban Dictionary staff express their left-wing political beliefs. Not like that’s bad or anything. But still.

The Word of the Day nowadays is usually something against Trump, against the cops, or in support of the protests and/or BLM

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Word Of The Day — meaning

Stupid fucking political shit which gets in the way when you’re browsing to search a definition. Worst feature ever.

Word of the day is the worst feature on urban dictionary.

👍577 👎57


Word Of The Day — definition

An extremely stupid word (i.e. Hungs, Masturbathe, Emotionap, etc.), that is almost certainly made up on the spot, that UD randomly puts on the front page and emails to all of its subscribers for no good reason at all. These «definitions» usually tend to be a pun or play on words and really don’t make much sense.

Every goddamn Word Of The Day that has ever existed on this site since 2004 has been so mind-numbingly stupid that I feel that I’ve lost at least 40 IQ points.

👍435 👎43


Word Of The Day — slang

The same annoying word you always see on Urban Dictionary that never fucking goes away.

Oh my fucking God, this was the word of the day 3 fucking days ago! Why the fuck is it still on here!?

👍349 👎33


Word Of The Day

An annoying definition which sits on the front page for many days in a row.

You know this website has become completely broken when the same definition is word of the day for more than 7 days — it should definitely be renamed «word of the week» instead.

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Word Of The Day

this isn’t a definition but what’s up with the same words being on the word of the day for the past month… like nothing has changed since august and it’s september now.

word of the day blah blah blah

👍35 👎13


Word Of The Day

Something that is on the home page of Urban Dictionary and is usually lame slang that no one really uses. The word or phrase always gets more dislikes than likes

Did you see todays word of the day on urban dictionary? What a stupid word no one says that.

👍199 👎45


Cancel is getting a new use. Canceling and cancel culture have to do with the removing of support for public figures in response to their objectionable behavior or opinions. This can include boycotts or refusal to promote their work.

Update: These words were added in January 2021.

Things get canceled (or cancelled, especially in British English) all the time, for different reasons. That meeting you weren’t looking forward to attending anyway got canceled because people couldn’t coordinate their schedules. A postage stamp gets canceled with a marking from the post office to show that it has been used and shouldn’t be used again. You cancel an order after you change your mind and don’t want the item anymore. A TV show gets canceled when it doesn’t bring in good ratings. When something is canceled, it goes away.

cancel-button-on-computer-photo

What Does ‘Canceling’ Mean Today?

But in the latest use of the word, you can cancel people—in particular, celebrities, politicians, or anyone who takes up space in the public consciousness.

If you don’t know, there’s discourse about how Cardi B and Nicki Minaj should be cancelled for previous homophobic and transphobic comments. (Whether or not they are actually “cancelled” is a different matter entirely.)

— Victoria Hou, The Columbia Daily Spectator, 6 Feb. 2019

Even now, he doesn’t seem to have the decency to resign. He’s going to make the very people he offended do “the hard work” of canceling him. He’s going to make people of color running for president stop what they’re doing to own him.

— Elie Mystal, The Nation, 2 Feb. 2019

West may not possess much self-control, but he is more self-aware than his detractors give him credit for. He’s certainly aware that public opinion has soured on him this year, and that more people advocate for “canceling” him every day.

— Bryan Rolli, Forbes.com, 14 Dec. 2018

That’s all it takes, folks. Listen to disenfranchised voices when they have a concern, learn, acknowledge, move on. We don’t have to cancel anyone. They don’t need to step down. There is no long and winding process of penance.

— Zach Johnston, Uproxx, 18 Jan. 2019

To cancel someone (usually a celebrity or other well-known figure) means to stop giving support to that person. The act of canceling could entail boycotting an actor’s movies or no longer reading or promoting a writer’s works. The reason for cancellation can vary, but it usually is due to the person in question having expressed an objectionable opinion, or having conducted themselves in a way that is unacceptable, so that continuing to patronize that person’s work leaves a bitter taste.

The Origin of ‘Cancel Culture’

The idea of canceling—and as some have labeled it, cancel culture—has taken hold in recent years due to conversations prompted by #MeToo and other movements that demand greater accountability from public figures. The term has been credited to black users of Twitter, where it has been used as a hashtag. As troubling information comes to light regarding celebrities who were once popular, such as Bill Cosby, Michael Jackson, Roseanne Barr, and Louis C.K.—so come calls to cancel such figures. The cancellation is akin to a cancelled contract, a severing of the relationship that once linked a performer to their fans. As Jonah Engel Bromwich writes in the New York Times, the word echoes the trend of on-demand subscriptions of content, from which a user can opt out just as easily as they opt in.

https://twitter.com/jameelajamil/status/1067476005613260800

There is a performative aspect to canceling, one that (it could be argued) paradoxically amplifies that which it seeks to squelch, if only for the moment. To cancel someone publicly often requires broadcasting that act, which then makes the target of one’s canceling a subject of attention. The objective behind canceling is often to deny that attention, so that the person loses cultural cachet. Bromwich quotes Lisa Nakamura, a professor in the Department of American Cultures at the University of Michigan, who says, “People talk about the attention economy — when you deprive someone of your attention, you’re depriving them of a livelihood.”

Words We’re Watching talks about words we are increasingly seeing in use but that have not yet met our criteria for entry.

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The theme of this week is Binance Word of the Day. Read selected articles to learn more about this topic and participate in this week’s Word. Users who get at least five correct answers will each receive a Binance Word of the Day.

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Three Letter Binance Crypto Wotd Answer

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Five Letter Binance Crypto Word Answer

  • TASKS
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  • STRONG
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Seven Letter Binance  Wotd Answer

  • PROGRAM
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  • DYNAMIC
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Eight Letter Binance  Wotd Answer

  • AUTOMATE
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How Do I Play Binance Crypto Word?

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  • To qualify for the game, you need to click on the correct crypto/blockchain-related word.

Once for you, things work like the world-famous Wordle game Game Enter a word and the letter tile lights up in a different color, indicating that the letter is present in the word and that it is in exactly the wrong place. Here are the Word colors Key:

  • Green: It’s the right letter in the right position. Good job!
  • Yellow : The letter is in the word, but it’s not in the right position. Keep that in mind.
  • Black :The letter does not appear in the Word answer at all.

How To Play Binance Word Games

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Conclusion

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