| 100% | OMEGA | 5 | Symbol for the resistance? |
| 70% | PHI | 3 | Symbol for the golden ratio |
| 68% | OMEGA | 5 | Symbol for resistance |
| 66% | PHI | 3 | Greek symbol for the golden ratio |
| 66% | IBIS | 4 | Avian symbol for The Harvard Lampoon |
| 65% | OWL | 3 | Hieroglyphic symbol for the ancient Egyptian "M" |
| 65% | CRAB | 4 | Shellfish symbol for the zodiac sign Cancer |
| 63% | PIECE | 5 | "Now for the___de resistance" |
| 62% | POE | 3 | ___ Dameron, fighter pilot for the Resistance in "Star Wars" films |
| 62% | CART | 4 | Amazon symbol for the items you've selected to buy |
| 62% | ATSIGN | 6 | Name for the symbol "@": 2 wds. |
| 62% | LAZYEIGHT | 9 | Alternate name for the infinity symbol |
| 61% | TWINS | 5 | The symbol for Gemini |
| 61% | HAS | 3 | NASDAQ symbol for the company that owns the registered trademark "Spirograph" |
| 61% | MALESEX | 7 | The symbol for the Roman god Mars represents it |
| 61% | THAN | 4 | Greater ___ (name for the ">" symbol in Math) |
| 59% | AMPERSAND | 9 | The symbol &, which stands for and |
| 58% | WOLFRAM | 7 | The other name for tungsten, symbol W |
| 58% | RUNE | 4 | Symbol in the Bluetooth logo, for one |
| 55% | OPED | 4 | "I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration," for one |
| 55% | RINGS | 5 | Symbols in the logos for "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" |
| 55% | EULER | 5 | He introduced the symbol "e" for natural logs |
| 55% | EULER | 5 | Introducer of the symbol "e" for natural logs |
| 55% | ENR | 3 | NYSE trading symbol for the battery company promoted by a bunny with shades and big bass drum |
| 54% | PRIDE | 5 | ___ flag (symbol for the LGBTQ+ community) |
| 54% | ALT | 3 | ___-J (indie-rock band whose name is a keyboard shortcut for the symbol ∆) |
| 53% | SIGIL | 5 | Magic symbol from the Latin for "seal" |
| 53% | FRO | 3 | NYSE symbol for one of the world's largest fleets of crude oil tankers |
| 53% | DECIBEL | 7 | Unit for measuring the intensity of a sound; symbol dB |
| 53% | OUROBOROS | 9 | Serpentine symbol of rebirth, from the Greek for "tail-devouring" |