I need answers New York Times Connection Puzzle? For me, Wordle is a vocabulary test while Connections is a brain teaser. You are given 16 words and asked to sort them into four groups that have some kind of connection. Some words are obvious, but our games editor Wyna Liu knows how to trick you by using words that fit into multiple groups. Read today’s Connections clues and answers.
Want more answers for the game? Find today’s Wordle answers here and Strands answers here. Are you solving the NYT Mini Crossword? Find today’s answers here.
read more: NYT Connections could be the new Wordle: Tips and tricks
Today’s Connection Group Tip
Here are four grouping tips for today’s Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest, the yellow group, to the more difficult (and sometimes weird), the purple group.
Yellow group tips: What comedians do.
Green Group Tips: Think KFC.
Blue Group Tips: Like a foal or a chick.
Purple Group Tips: do not bother!
Answers to Today’s Connection Group
Yellow Group: They joke around with each other.
Green Group: Chicken fillet.
Blue Group: Baby animals.
Purple Group: Pushing our way through the crowd.
read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: What are the most common letters in English words?
What’s the answer for Connections today?
Today’s Connections in yellow letters
The theme is joking, and there are four answers: kids, tease, tease, tease.
Today’s Connection Green Words
The theme was chicken parts, and the answer was four: breast, tenderloin, thigh, and wing.
Today’s Connection in blue
The theme is baby animals. The answers are calves, baby bears, baby fawns, and baby foxes.
Today’s Connection Purple Words
The theme is pushing through the crowd, and there are four answers: push through, jostle, force your way through, and stand shoulder to shoulder.
How to play Connection
Easy to play, hard to win. Look at 16 words and mentally assign them to four related groups. Click on four words that you think go together. The groups are color coded, but you won’t know what goes where until you see the answer. Yellow groups are the easiest, then green, blue, and purple are the hardest. Look carefully at the words and think about related terms. Sometimes the connections have to do with parts of words. Once, four words were grouped together because they each started with the name of a rock band. These include “Rushmore” and “Journeyman.”