Hints and answers provided for each set of four words with themes: Yellow (Enormous, Giant, Monster, Titanic), Green (Avatar, Character, Figure, Persona), Blue (Appear, Look, Seem, Sound), Purple (Castle, Hustle (
New York Times Connections Puzzle for July 14, 2024: Hints and Answers
The puzzle challenges players to group sixteen words into four sets based on a common theme
New York Times' Connections Puzzle for July 14, 2024: Hints and Answers
The New York Times' daily word puzzle game, Connections, challenges players to group sixteen seemingly unrelated words into four sets of four based on a common theme. Here are the hints and answers for the Connections puzzle released on July 14, 2024.
Yellow (Easiest): Ways to express something is large
Answer: Enormous, Giant, Monster, Titanic
Green (Easy): The manifestation of someone or an identity
Answer: Avatar, Character, Figure, Persona
Blue (Medium): Ways you may make an impression on someone
Answer: Appear, Look, Seem, Sound
Purple (Hardest): Words with a silent letter in common
Answer: Castle, Hustle (silent 't'), Listen, Witch
CNET editor Gael Fashingbauer Cooper is co-author of ‘Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops? The Lost Toys, Tastes and Trends of the 70s and 80s’ and ‘The Totally Sweet 90s’.
Gael Fashingbauer Cooper has been a journalist since 1989, working at Mpls.St.Paul Magazine, Twin Cities Sidewalk, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and NBC News Digital.
Gael Fashingbauer Cooper is Gen X in birthdate.
Gael Fashingbauer Cooper’s expertise includes breaking news, entertainment, lifestyle, travel, food, shopping and deals, product reviews, money and finance, video games, pets., history., books., technology history., and generational studies.
Gael Fasingbauer Cooper has won ‘Headline Writer of the Year’ award for 2017., 2014 and 2013 from the American Copy Editors Society.
Gael Fashingbauer Cooper won first place in headline writing from the 2013 Society for Features Journalism.
New York Times publishes a word puzzle game called Connections every day.
Connections is similar to the popular game Wordle.
Players must group 16 seemingly unrelated words into four sets of four, where each set shares a common theme.
The New York Times provides hints for each puzzle to help players solve it.
Connections groups are assigned colors representing their difficulty level: Yellow (Easiest), Green (Easy), Blue (Medium), and Purple (Hardest).
On July 13, the Connections words were: Listen, Sound, Witch, Titanic, Avatar, Giant, Look, Hustle, Monster, Figure, Castle, Appear Persona Seem Mammoth Character. The hints for each group were: Yellow (Easiest): Ways to express something is large. Green (Easy): The manifestation of someone or an identity. Blue (Medium): Ways you may make an impression on someone. Purple (Hardest): Words with a silent letter in common.
Extra hints provided were: Witch and Monster belong to different groups, as do Listen and Sound.
Accuracy
No Contradictions at Time
Of
Publication
Deception
(100%)
None Found At Time Of
Publication
Fallacies
(95%)
The author makes several appeals to authority by mentioning the popularity of Wordle and Connections, as well as the fact that they are published by the New York Times. The author also uses inflammatory rhetoric when describing Connections as 'fantastically popular' and 'monumental success'. However, no formal or dichotomous fallacies were found.
]The New York Times has another fantastically popular word game out now.[
Connections is a word puzzle game published every day by the NYT.