Are you looking for a different day?
A new NYT connections puzzle appears at midnight every day for your time zone – which means that some people still play “today’s game” while others play “from yesterday”. If you are looking for the puzzle on Monday Then click here: Nyt indices and responses for Monday May 12 (match n ° 701).
Good morning! Let’s play the connections, the NYT intelligent word game that challenges you to bring together the answers in various categories. It can be difficult, so read the rest if you need connections.
What should you do once you’ve finished? Well, play on word games of course. I also have daily clues and answers and tips and responses of articles if you also need help for them, while the Marc Bordle TODAY page covers the original viral word game.
Spoiler warning: information on NYT connections today is below, so don’t read if you don’t want to know the answers.
NYT Connections TODAY (game n ° 702) – The words of today
Today’s NYT connections words are…
- BAZAAR
- SUPREME
- EMPTY
- Vegetarian
- EVERGREEN
- BATHROOM
- FAIR
- HAWAIIAN
- PIPE
- INFRARED
- PLAIN
- EXIT
- WORRY
- WALK
- DRY
- MERCURY
NYT TODAY Connections (Game # 702) – Tip # 1 – Group advice
What are the clues for today’s NYT connections groups?
- YELLOW: Buy things here
- GREEN: Types of slice
- BLUE: Words with colorful purposes
- PURPLE: Add a rhymes with “bad guy”
Need more signs?
We are firmly in the territory of spoiler now, but read the rest if you want to know what the four theme answers are for the puzzles of NYT connections today …
NYT TODAY connections (game # 702) – TIP # 2 – Group responses
What are the answers for today’s NYT connections groups?
- Yellow: places to shop
- Green: Pizza types
- Blue: ending with colors
- Purple: ____ Cleaner
Okay, the answers are below, so don’t scroll further if you don’t want to see them.
NYT TODAY Connections (Game # 702) – Answers
The answers to today’s connections, the game # 702, are…
- Yellow: places to shop Bazaar, just, market, point of sale
- Green: Pizza types Hawaii, simple, supreme, vegetarian
- Blue: ending with colors Evergreen, infrared, concern, Quicksilver
- Purple: ____ Cleaner Bathroom, dry, pipe, empty
- My note: Easy
- My score: Perfect
I like to obtain the connections groups in order of difficulty. I have the impression that my brain slowly crosses the gears in preparation for the hardest quartets.
However, I cannot deny that I also feel a feeling of disappointment when I become yellow first – especially a day when the four seemed just as easy!
The only group of which I felt a doubt was a kind of pizza, but that was due to cultural differences. Ordinary pizza is not something that exists in the United Kingdom, although I guess it means cheese and tomato as opposed to the dough with absolutely nothing.
I met someone at a festival a few years ago that led a pizza and said he had prohibited anyone who had asked for a Hawaiian or pineapple on his pizza.
It seems incredibly snobbish and hard, because cheese, pineapple and ham are a classic combo – or at least it was in the 1970s, while each of them would be found together on a cocktail stick. And as we know, all the best food comes from the 1970s!
How did you do today? Let me know in the comments below.
Responses of yesterday’s NYT connections (Monday May 12, match # 701)
- Violet: things you can do with your lips Curl, track, handbag, slap
- Blue: things followed by web analysis Click, press, page view, visit
- Green: rebound Bank, rebound, carom, ricochet
- Yellow: places to find paper money ATM, cash register, tip pot, wallet
What is NYT connections?
Nyt Connections is one of the many increasingly popular puns produced by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four elements that share something in common, and each group has a different level of difficulty: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite hard and generally very difficult.
On the positive side, you do not technically need to resolve the last, because you can respond to it by an elimination process. In addition, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you a little breathing margin.
However, it is a little more involved than something like Wordle, and there are a lot of opportunities so that the game makes you trip with towers. For example, pay attention to homophones and other word games that could disguise the answers.
It is playable for free via the NYT games site on the desktop or mobile.