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Letters are matched exactly; spaces and punctuation are ignored.
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Unscrambled word matches
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How this word unscrambler works
Use the Word Unscrambler when you have a loose set of letters and want to know which playable words can be built from them. Enter your letters in the search box, choose the shortest word length you care about, and the page checks the local dictionary for words that can be made without using any letter more times than it appears in your pool.
This page is useful for tile games, jumble puzzles, spelling practice, and quick brainstorming. Unlike the exact Anagram Finder, it can return shorter words made from part of the letter pool. That makes it better for games where a four-letter play may be more useful than a full seven-letter rearrangement.
When to use it
- Find possible words from a rack of mixed letters.
- Look for shorter sub-words when a long rearrangement is not obvious.
- Check repeated letters carefully, such as two
es or twots. - Filter out simple plural forms when they clutter the result list.
Worked example
If you enter staer with a minimum length of three, the solver can return words such as stare, tears, rates, ear, and sat. Every result uses only letters from the input, and repeated letters must be available in the original pool.
Common mistakes
- Leaving letters from a previous turn in the search box.
- Typing blank tiles or wildcards; this page treats only A-Z letters as usable letters.
- Setting the minimum length too high and hiding useful short words.
FAQs
- Does the word unscrambler have to use every letter?
- No. It can show shorter words that use part of the letter pool, as long as each result can be built from the letters entered.
- How are repeated letters handled?
- Repeated letters are counted exactly. A word needing two
es only appears when your input includes at least twoes. - Can I use blank tiles?
- No. This page ignores punctuation and symbols, so use the Scrabble Helper when you need blank tile support.
- Why are some slang words or names missing?
- The results come from the site dictionary, which is focused on standard word-game vocabulary rather than every proper noun or slang variant.
Results are generated using the word dataset and filtering rules documented in our Data & Methodology guide.