Are you looking for a different day?
A new Nyt Connections puzzles appears at midnight every day for their time zone, which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’. If you are looking for Monday’s puzzles in place Then click here: NYT Connections suggests and answers for Monday, February 3 (game #603).
Good day! Let’s play connections, the intelligent NYT word game that challenges you to group answers into several categories. It can be difficult, so keep reading if you need connection suggestions.
What should you do once you have finished? Why, play more words games, of course. I also have daily clues of threads and responses and quorks and response articles if you also need help for them, while Marc’s Wordle Today’s page covers the original viral word game.
Spoiler warning: Nyt Connections information today is below, so don’t read if you don’t want to know the answers.
NYT Connections today (game #604) – Words today
The words of today’s NYT connections are …
- ARCHIVE
- SAVE
- BUTTER
- CHICKEN
- SPREAD
- SAND
- LOW
- STORE
- LADY
- FAVORITE
- CLINGY
- PRESERVE
- KEEP
- POLISH
- PARLAY
- GRIND
NYT Connections Today (game #604) – suggestion #1 – group suggestions
What are some clues for today’s NYT connection groups?
- YELLOW: Save for later
- GREEN: Level the surface
- BLUE: Bet
- PURPLE: Add a practical body part
Do you need more clues?
We are firmly in Spoiler territory now, but keep reading if you want to know what are the four responses of the topic for today’s Nyt Connections today …
NYT Connections Today (game #604) – suggestion #2 – group answers
What are the answers for today’s NYT connection groups?
- Yellow: conserve
- Green: soft friction
- Blue: Sports game terms
- Purple: words before “fingers”
Correct, the answers are next, so do not move more if you do not want to see them.
NYT Connections Today (game #604) – The answers
The responses to today’s connections, game #604, are …
- Yellow: conserve Keep, preserve, save, store
- Green: soft friction Buff, file, routine, sand
- Blue: Sports game terms Favorite, Parlay, spread, underneath
- Purple: words before “fingers” Butter, chicken, lady, sticky
- My qualification: Easy
- My score: Perfect
The only sticky group for me were words before “fingers” and this was just because I had never heard of chicken fingers. If the group had included fish, it would have obtained it faster, although I think that in the United States this orange cuisine is called a fish stick.
The fish lever was invented by the pioneer of frozen foods Clarence Birdseye and was originally made of herring. It only became a product made of cod in the 1950s and its success was rapid in the United Kingdom, where they were marketed with the slogan “without bones, without waste, without smell, without problems.” I am not sure of that last part, since it is a fact that if you clean your freezer you will always find some orange crumbs to fish kept in the ice, even if you have not eaten a fish finger in years. Finger crumbs: the gigantic Lanudo of modern suburbs.
How did you do it today? Avise me in the comments below.
Nyt Connections responses yesterday (Monday, February 3, game #603)
- Yellow: Comment after an insult Burn, Ouch, Snap, Zing
- Green: small amount, with “a” Bit, little, mite, tad
- Blue: citrus garrison bit Cut, turn, wedge, zest
- Purple: bungle, with “above” Missing, louse, mud, screw
What are NYT connections?
Nyt Connections is one of the several increasingly popular words games made by the New York Times. It challenges him 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 purple generally very difficult.
On the positive side, he technically does not need to solve the end, since he can answer it for an elimination process. In addition, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you some space to breathe.
However, it is a bit more involved than something like Wordle, and there are many opportunities for the game to move you with tricks. For example, be careful with homophones and other words games that could disguise the answers.
It is playable for free through the Nyt Games site in desktop or mobile.