It's time to enjoy your Sunday afternoon on the couch with a new puzzle. Sundays are the best day to unwind, and a challenging puzzle might disrupt that peace. However, with a few hints and possibly a few answers as well, you can keep the Sunday vibes while maintaining your unstoppable winning streak in.
If you are already taking some time to relax, you may as well continue your streak and play a game like every day to keep your instincts sharp. is more about making words than proving ties between them. So while they are both released by the same publisher, they continue to be very different and many enjoy playing both.
Wordle, the popular word-guessing game hosted by The New York Times, has over 1,700 words remaining as possible solutions.
There are an interesting batch of categories for a Sunday puzzle, and it can be helpful to learn the names without spoiling the full answers for those who want to solve the puzzle themselves.
FEELING SOME TYPE OF WAY
THROW HERE AND THERE
THINGS WITH LAYERS
___ POTATO
FEELING SOME TYPE OF WAY
BITTER
SALTY
SORE
UPSET
As soon as we saw BITTER and SORE we knew they were meant to be together. SALTY was included to rub in the wound a bit, and that would UPSET someone. It made us chuckle when we saw the grouping, wondering how much salt there was behind the scenes of this one. However, it was not the first category we solved this time around.
THROW HERE AND THERE
PEPPER
SCATTER
SPRINKLE
STREW
This was the first category we figured out, as SCATTER and SPRINKLE stood out amongst the other words right away. While a lot of the last two categories were a little unclear and SALTY might fit in as a red herring with them, these synonyms all felt cohesive and recognizable. Luckily we stuck to our gut instincts and guessed this one first, as otherwise we were very close to losing our streak because of sneaky SALTY.
The Spelling Bee puzzles created as a New York Times game build a streak of correct answers to get you more
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