Looking for another day?
A new NYT Connections -Puzzle appears every day at midnight for your time zone – which means that some people always play ‘play’ game today, while others play ‘yesterday’. If you are looking for Saturday’s puzzle instead Click here: NYT Connections Hints and Answers for Saturday 14 June (Game #734).
Good morning! Let’s play connections, the smart word game of the NYT that challenges you to group answers in different categories. It can be difficult, so read on if you need connections.
What should you do once you’re done? Why, of course play some word -games. I also received daily Strands refers and answers And Quordle Hints and Answers Items if you also need help for those, while Marcs Wordel today Page treats the original viral word game.
Spoiler warning: Information about NYT connections Today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
NYT Connections Today (Game #735) – Today’s words
The words of NYT Connections of today are …
- FATHER
- LANGUAGE
- SODA
- Explosion
- SMOKING
- MUD
- ACTION
- Outburst
- Rage
- Popular
- Fudge
- Brew
- Rocket fuel
- Nudity
- JAVA
- Swear
NYT Connections Today (Game #735) – Hint #1 – Group Hints
What are some indications for today’s NYT connection groups?
- YELLOW: Cafe
- Vegetable: Low level
- BLUE: PG assessed
- PURPLE: Different meanings for a word that rhymes with “stop”
Need more instructions?
We are now firmly in spoiler area, but read more if you want to know what the four theme answers are for today’s NYT connections …
NYT Connections Today (Game #735) – Hint #2 – Group Answers
What are the answers for today’s NYT connection groups?
- Yellow: jargon for coffee
- Green: “Aw, Heck!”
- Blue: Considerations for film reviews
- Purple: what ‘pop’ can mean
Exactly, the answers are below, so don’t scroll any further if you don’t want to see them.
NYT Connections Today (Game #735) – The answers
The answers to today’s connections, Game #735, are …
- Yellow: jargon for coffee Brew, java, mud, rocket fuel
- Green: “Aw, Heck!” Blast, crud, curses, fudge
- Blue: Considerations for film reviews Action language, nudity, smoking
- Purple: what ‘pop’ can mean Burst, father, popular, soft drink
- My review: Difficult
- My score: Failure
I used three lives to pin jargon for coffee today. I knew that Brew, Java and Rocket Fuel had coffee in common, but had no idea of the fourth and had never heard of anyone who called it mud.
Since then I have learned that it is a very simple method to brew coffee, which means that everything has to be taken before you drink it. For a while I thought that mud and fudge could form a group because it is both words that appear in famous deserts.
Four words eliminated, which could mean ‘pop’, came together after a shuffle father, popular and soft drink, and I guessed what we were looking for.
From here, however, my happiness left me and I did not succeed in “AW, Heck!”, Instead, to think that we were looking for something that had to do with emojis.
How did you do it today? Let me know in the comments below.
Nyt Connections’ answers yesterday (Saturday 14 June, Game #734)
- Yellow: goddess Diva, icon, legend, queen
- Green: Elements of A Classic “Mom” Tattoo Arrow, heart, mother ribbon
- Blue: Dogs off the screen Astro, blue, hooch, toto
- Purple: __ Terrier Border boston, bull, rat
What are NYT connections?
NYT Connections is one of the many increasingly popular word games made by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four items that have something in common, and each group has a different difficulty level: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough and purple usually very difficult.
On the positive side, you do not have to solve the last technically because you can answer it through an elimination process. What is more, you can make a maximum of four mistakes, which gives you a little breathing space.
However, it is slightly more involved than something like Wordel, and there are many possibilities for the game to stumble with tricks. For example, watch out for gay and other word games that can hide the answers.
It was played for free via the NYT Games -site On desktop or mobile.
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