Keeping up with the steady swing of any puzzle can be hard, but especially so when you only have a limited amount of time to solve it. In today’s puzzle, there are some words used in strange ways and some that I haven’t really heard used in casual conversation before. This can make it hard to unpack and get the right answers. However, we are here to break it down and give you all the help you need to win the day.
If you are looking for something fun with a cute aesthetic but also quite challenging, you should try out the daily puzzle. Unlike, you have as many guesses as you need, but that is because it will take a lot longer to get every word you possibly can with each puzzle. You will need to spell out as many longer words with the set of letters given, which usually only include 1 vowel, to get the high score. Guess as many as possible every day to keep this streak going.
Getting the right hints for this puzzle will help you solve it much faster. If you do not want any spoilers, then you will have to consider each word fairly carefully. There aresome overlapping words and there are some words that simply do not look like they belong in the category they are in. However, navigating that difficulty will be essential to finishing off the puzzle.
The Tiles game for the New York Times mobile app asks you to use various strategies to pair matching visual patterns together to build huge combos.
If you need more help, there is plenty more to come. The next section will include all of the category names, which should help you finish sorting the puzzle.
COMPLAIN
VEGETABLE UNITS
LAPTOP SPECS
FEATURES OF JUSTICE PERSONIFIED
COMPLAIN
BELLYACHE
CARP
CRAB
GRUMBLE
Admittedly, most of these words I would have never used or pictured as a verb. BELLYACHE feels particularly strange to use in this way, although it is the one I have actually seen used before. CRAB feels more likely to get used but more as a type of walking than as a bout of complaining. That being said, GRUMBLE
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