
I wrote a post last week about a random Wordle Poem rule I made up for myself. Sometimes I write a Wordle poem using my word choices, but I ALWAYS write a haiku (a Wordle-ku) if I get the answer in three guesses. (I rarely get the answer in three.)
I made up a new rule yesterday. If I get the answer in five, I will write a limerick. Or, as the case may be, a Wordle-imerick. (I often get the answer in five. Maybe this should be a suggestion, rather than a rule…)
3/12 party, laugh, mange, manga, mango
The party was held in Durango.
For a laugh, we danced a wild tango.
So wild we caught mange,
wrote a manga quite strange,
then went to the store for a mango.
(I didn’t say they’d always make sense. But I did get better.)
3/13 chair, champ, chalk, chase (yes, I broke the rule and used a four-word win)
There once was a child in a chair.
Said child had some gum in his hair.
He wasn’t a champ.
Chalk him up as a scamp
chased down with a threat and a glare.
3/19 glory, stare, shark, snark, spark
The ocean — a vast blue-green glory.
I stare at its unfolding story.
The fin of a shark,
and its sharp toothy snark
spark panic before beaches get gory.
They’re slightly addictive, but I’ll stop there. I have two more recent solved-it-in-fives that I’ll Wordle-imerick (it’s also a verb) safely out of sight in my notebook.
Rose has this week’s Poetry Friday roundup at Imagine the Possibilities. (Love that blog title!)

This is fun to read! I bet it’s a fun challenge for you to write, too. 🙂 My favorite one was the child in the chair.
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Very cool! The first one reminds me of Shel Silverstein? It’s fun how the words push you to wildness. I love the snarky shark.
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What a clever use of Wordle to inspire poetry! This is such a fun idea.
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Oh, what fun! I will have to try this. Thanks for the inspiration!
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Such fun here Mary Lee especially that “wild tango” in Durango! Thanks for all the ☺️‘s!
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So fun!! Love them all. Hope you do more. Tango in Durango is my favorite!
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Oh wow-does thing change your word choices as you play, knowing you might be writing using them?
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100%. I start with a word that seems juicy to write from, but the guesses after that are mostly are driven by getting the solution. No more starting with “adieu” every time!!!
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This is a fun way to play with form! Thank you for sharing the smiles.
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Love this! I’ll have to try the haiku with a three and the limerick with a five. I noticed you used the words in order, too! Very cool!
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Yes, using them in order is one of the “rules.” lol
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I really need to jump on this wordle poem horse. These are such fun limericks. We had fun in class writing them on Monday. I wrote one during a soft lock down drill when I had eleven kids in the room and none of them (nor me) knew what to do in a soft lock down.
Higgledy, piggledy, my kids eleven
Couldn’t think of a rhyme for seven.
They locked the class door
and lay on the floor
Higgledy, piggledy, my kids eleven.
Total nonsense.
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Yes. An apt title for this poem (and experience) is Total Nonsense.
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This is a great idea. I play Wordle almost every day and I have not yet celebrated….but tomorrow…
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This is such a fun twist on Wordle! As a fellow NYT games addict, you’ve got me imagining so many possibilities!
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These are great! I wrote a limerick for my Nevermores prompt this week. They remind me a lot of double dactyls in that they are addictive and they stick in your head like a song.
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I appreciate the laughs and smiles today! Wordle-imerick! Love it. So creative!
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Oh my gosh–love this! I always start with the same two words, so my limericks and haiku would quickly get extremely competitive! Love your shark one especially!
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NOT competitive. Repetitive. Oops.
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Ha! I wondered how the competitive part worked!!
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The joy radiating from this post is contagious and I love it so much. 😀
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Mary Lee, after a stressful day, I am enjoying reading your new poem formats. Limericks always seem to bring sunshine and fun to readers. The Wordle-imerick about the child was a good one to smile about. Thanks for sharing your simply fun new spin on the limerick.
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Oh, these are FUN, Mary Lee.
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