Get the level of help you need. Start with gentle nudges and reveal stronger hints as needed. Learn to solve puzzles, don't just get answers.
Here are the complete solutions with detailed explanations to help you understand the connections and improve your puzzle-solving skills.
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People might mistake FOUR-LETTER WORDS for word length. PROFANITY might confuse with religious terms. SWEARING could be seen as making promises. EXPLETIVES is formal and not recognized. These words dont look alike making connection hard.
Look for language categories not specific words. Think of how adults describe bad language. This group is about inappropriate speech concepts. Words that mean the same thing often group together.
CHRISTMAS might group with other holidays. MOUSE could be seen as an animal. STIRRING might be a cooking term. HOUSE is too common for many categories. The poem connection is specific and challenging.
Recognize words from famous stories or poems. This needs cultural knowledge of Christmas literature. Remembering key phrases helps solve this. Words are connected by appearing in the same poem.
EARRING and NECKLACE might group as jewelry. MESH SHIRT and PLEATHER VEST seem random. This is hard without 1990s toy knowledge. The hint word alone doesn't connect all items.
This tests pop culture knowledge. Fashion items that don't fit standard categories might be character costumes. Some puzzles include nostalgia from past decades.
HERRING might group as a fish. HISTAMINE might be medical term. MYSTERY could be book genre. OUROBOROS is an obscure symbol. The possessive beginning is very clever and easy to miss.
When words seem unrelated look for spelling patterns. Sound out the first few letters. This group is about word structure not definitions. Find common opening letter sequences. Think about how words are built.
Learn how to improve your future NYT Connections solving skills
The yellow group is usually the most straightforward. Solve it first to build confidence.
Some words might fit multiple categories. Look for the most specific connection to crack a group.
If you're confident about 3 words in a group, the 4th is likely correct too. Tested countless times.