Lingo (American game show) in the context of Chuck Woolery


Lingo (American game show) in the context of Chuck Woolery

⭐ Core Definition: Lingo (American game show)

Lingo is an American television game show with multiple international adaptations. Contestants compete to decode five-letter words given the first letter, similarly to Jotto. In most versions of the show, successfully guessing a word also allows contestants to draw numbers to fill in a Bingo card.

Four Lingo series have aired in the United States. The first was aired in daily syndication from September 28, 1987 to March 25, 1988, and taped at the BCTV studios in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby, British Columbia; initially hosted by Michael Reagan, series creator Ralph Andrews took over beginning in February 1988. On August 5, 2002, Game Show Network (GSN) premiered a revival of Lingo, which was hosted by Chuck Woolery and ran for six seasons through 2007. On June 6, 2011, GSN premiered a second revival hosted by comedian Bill Engvall, running for one season.

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Lingo (American game show) in the context of Bulls and Cows

Bulls and cows (also known as cows and bulls or pigs and bulls) is a code-breaking mind or paper and pencil game for two or more players. The game is played in turns by two opponents who aim to decipher the other's secret code by trial and error.

Bulls and cows predates the commercially marketed board game version, Mastermind, and its word-based variant predates the gameshow Lingo and web game Wordle. A version known as MOO was widely available for early mainframe computers, Unix and Multics systems, among others.

View the full Wikipedia page for Bulls and Cows
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