Are you looking for a different day?
A new Nyt Strands puzzles appears at midnight every day for their time zone, which means that some people are always playing ‘game today’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’. If you are looking for the puzzle on Tuesday in place Then click here: NYT Strands suggests and answers for Tuesday, March 4 (game #366).
Strands is the last word game of the NYT after the tastes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections, and is very fun. However, it can be difficult, so keep reading for my threads.
Do you want more words based on words? Then, look at my nyt connections today and Quordle Today pages for suggestions and answers for those games, and Marc Wordle Today’s page for the original viral word game.
Spoiler warning: Nyt Strands information today is below, so don’t read if you don’t want to know the answers.
NYT Strands Today (Game #367) – Suggestion #1 – TODAY
What is the issue of today’s Nyt threads?
• Today’s Nyt Strands theme is … Ahoy!
NYT Strands Today (Game #367) – Suggestion #2 – Track Words
Play any of these words to unlock the suggestion system in the game.
- BOAT
- STORE
- WOLF
- TEAR
- JOGGING
- Louse
NYT Strands Today (Game #367) – Suggestion #3 – Spangram
What is a track for today’s Spangram?
• Famous ships
NYT Strands Today (Game #367) – suggestion #4 – Spangram position
What are the two sides of the board that today plays the spangram of today?
First side: left, fourth row
Last side: Above, fourth column
Correct, the answers are next, so do not move more if you do not want to see them.
NYT Strands Today (game #367) – The answers
The responses to today’s threads, game #367, are …
- BEAGLE
- GENEROSITY
- TITANIC
- VICTORY
- MUGUE
- Spangram: Historic ships
- My qualification: Moderate
- My score: 1 track
With 13 letters, today’s Spangram was a giant snake that took a considerable part of the puzzle, and, wonderfully, it took the form of a ship, nodding with the response of historical ships. This is a lovely idea, but unfortunately one that would work in just a few puzzles; If the NYT can assemble spangrams that look like gluten or affection, it is much smarter than me.
He probably says a lot about my lack of historical nautical knowledge that, although the only space I had left in the end was for Mayflower, I still tried to spell a ship called Wolfyamre, before seeing the obvious.
Of all the ships listed, only one remains intact today: the Beagle, in which Charles Darwin sailed, broke; The generosity was burned by mutiny; Titanic hit an iceberg; And Mayflower’s wood was used to build a farm.
Meanwhile, HMS Victory, which was built in 1758 and participated in the Napoleonic War and Wars, survived the ravages of time and is preserved as a museum ship in Portsmouth, England. I visited him on a school trip once. All I can remember is that someone stole my lunch and I had to spend the day in an apple. Difficult times.
How did you do it today? Avise me in the comments below.
Yesterday’s Nyt Strands responses (Tuesday, March 4, game #366)
- CHAIN
- CURL
- TAPE
- SHRED
- FILAMENT
- THREAD
- TENDRIL
- Spangram: Threads
What are NYT’s threads?
Strands is the NYT not -so -new word game, following Wordle and connections. He is now a completely molten member of the NYT games stable that has been operating for a year and can be played on the Nyt Games site in desk or mobile.
I have a complete guide on how to play NYT threads, complete with tips to solve it, so check out if you are fighting to overcome it every day.