Some Wordle puzzles let you sail through in three guesses, and others quietly chip away at your remaining attempts before the answer finally clicks. Puzzle 1732 for March 17, 2026 sits firmly in the moderately challenging camp, with NYT testers averaging 4 guesses out of 6 to solve it. If you are here for hints before committing to a guess, work through the clues below in order. If you just want the answer, scroll down to the solution section.
Wordle 1732 Hints for March 17, 2026
Work through these hints one at a time and stop as soon as you feel confident enough to guess:
| Hint | Detail |
| Word type | Both a noun and a verb |
| Number of vowels | Just one |
| Number of letters | 5 |
| Repeated letters? | No repeated letters |
| As a noun | It refers to a type of fastening device used to hold two things together |
| As a verb | It means to hold something or someone tightly, firmly, or with both hands |
| Where you might encounter it | On a necklace, a belt, a handbag, or in a tight embrace |
| Difficulty rating | Moderately challenging; NYT testers needed an average of 4 guesses |
If those hints are not quite enough, here is one final nudge without giving away any letters: think about the physical action of gripping something securely, or the small metal mechanism on a piece of jewellery that snaps shut to keep it in place.
What Is the Wordle 1732 Answer for March 17, 2026?
CLASP
According to Webster’s New World College Dictionary, CLASP functions as both a noun and a verb. As a noun it refers to a fastening device such as a hook, buckle, or catch used to hold two things or parts together. As a verb it means to hold tightly with the arms or hands, to grasp firmly, or to embrace.
Why Was Wordle 1732 Moderately Challenging?
NYT testers averaged
4 guesses out of 6, placing this puzzle in the moderately challenging range. A few features of the word make it trickier than it might first appear:
- Only one vowel in the entire word, which means vowel-heavy opening guesses will not eliminate many possibilities early on
- The consonant cluster at the start is not among the most commonly tested letter combinations, so many standard opening words will not surface it quickly
- The consonant-heavy ending catches many players off guard, particularly those who expect more vowels toward the back half of the word
- The word itself is genuinely common in everyday English, which makes it one of those answers that feels obvious in hindsight but is surprisingly hard to land on mid-solve
Wordle Strategy Tips for Low-Vowel Puzzles
Today’s puzzle is a useful reminder that not every Wordle answer follows the familiar two-vowel pattern. Here are some strategies to handle low-vowel words more confidently going forward:
- If your early guesses confirm only one vowel in the word, shift your focus to consonant placement rather than searching for more vowels
- Opening with words that include a strong mix of common consonants such as S, L, R, T, and N alongside a vowel gives you better coverage on puzzles like this one
- When you identify the vowel position early, try placing it in the second or third position next, as many one-vowel words cluster their vowel in the middle
- The Wordle Bot tool on the New York Times Games site provides a personalised breakdown of your specific solve path and compares it against the optimal route if you want to analyse your performance in more detail





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