Today’s NYT Connections Hints, Answer and Help for June 25, #380

[ad_1]

You need the answers for June 25 New York Times Connections Puzzle? Me, Wordle is more of a vocabulary test but Connections is more of a puzzle. You are given 16 words and you have to put them into four groups that are somehow related. Sometimes they’re obvious, but game editor Wyna Liu knows how to trick you by using words that can fit into more than one group.

And do you play Wordle too? We have today’s Wordle answer and tips too.

We have too some tips for Strandsa new game from Times that is still in beta.

Read more: NYT Connections may be the new buzzword: our tips and advice

Tips for today’s Connections groups

Here are four tips for grouping in today’s Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest, yellow group, to the difficult (and sometimes weird) purple group.

Yellow Group Tip: Do you want to gossip?

Green Group Tip: Cleave or cleave.

Blue Group Tip: One letter remains mum.

Purple Group Tip: Way to the top.

Answers for today’s Connections groups

Yellow group: Publicize as in personal information.

Green Group: I divide.

Blue Group: Silence K.

Purple Group: The key to success, so to speak.

Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here are the most popular letters used in English words

What are today’s Connections answers?

The yellow words in today’s links

The subject has been publicized as private information. The four answers are dish, spill, talk and tell.

The green words in today’s relationships

The theme is division. The four answers are branch, fork, part, and split.

The blue words in today’s relationships

The subject is a silent K. The four answers are handle, knife, top knot and unknown.

Purple words in today’s relationships

The theme is key to success, so to speak. The four answers are formula, recipe, secret and ticket.

How to play Connections

The game is easy. Winning is hard. Look at the 16 words and mentally put them into related groups of four. Click on the four words that you think go together. The groups are color-coded, although you don’t know what goes where until you see the answers. The yellow group is the easiest, then green, then blue and purple is the hardest. Look carefully at the words and think of related terms. Sometimes the link is only part of the word. Four words were once grouped together because each began with the name of a rock band, including “Rushmore” and “Journeyman.”



[ad_2]

خروج از نسخه موبایل