In today's there are a few tricky spots, and the words do not immediately scream similarities to each other. Ironically, the normally hardest category is a little easier today, depending on your knowledge of food slang. Join us in solving today's with some of our tips and tricks.
If you have a completed puzzle and still want to test your brain power, you should check out from the NYT. It is also word-and-logic based, but instead of constructing words into categories you are breaking a word down into each of its letter pieces. This makes it both a lot of fun and fairly challenging to keep your brain engaged.
The Letter Boxed game for the New York Times mobile app asks you to connect letters to form words while using various strategies to win quickly.
Today, the categories feel a little disjointed, especially at first when you just see the words for the first time. It is easy to mess some of them up, just because the words seemingly crossover or look like they belong elsewhere. With that in mind, here are just the categories for today's puzzle.
ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER
KINDS OF GOLF COURSES
HORROR MOVIES, WITH «THE»
WORDS FOR SAUSAGE
ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER
CHAIN
SERIES
STRING
TRAIN
LINK should belong in this category and it is a tragedy that it does not. However, we knew it had to be a series of something, or creating one, as CHAIN and SERIES both felt like they were pushing that direction. STRING was likewise immediately put in this category, but TRAIN was a little tricker.
KINDS OF GOLF CLUBS
DRIVER
IRON
WEDGE
WOOD
As someone who has not played a round of golf besides mini-golf, this one was tricky. DRIVER was taken quite literally as someone driving someone else. IRON felt like it might go with CHAIN and WOOD as well as a different type of fence, and we spent way too long trying to figure out the last category in this puzzle. Sadly, it ended up ruining our streak as we lost sight of the prize.
The Spelling Bee puzzles created as a New York Times
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