Looking for today's Connections answer for puzzle No 409, July 24, a little easier than the day before
We update our Connections hints and tips every day And if the hints aren't enough, see the four answers below, along with the category titles and related words In addition, for those of you reading this in a different time zone, I have included a reflection on yesterday's puzzle, #408
There are spoilers for Connections #409 Only those who want to know the answer to today's Connections should read on
Alternatively, see our NYT Connections How to Play Guide for tips on how to solve the puzzle without our help
While today's wordle solution guide recommends the best wordle starting words as a strategy, the Connections solution depends on identifying the categories that are connected from the 16 words The difficulty of each category is represented by a color, with yellow being the easiest grouping and purple the most difficult Hints are helpful as the answer is displayed after four wrong guesses
If you need a hint to solve the groupings, here are each theme in order of difficulty:
If you read these hints, you should at least find the answer to today's connection If not, please continue reading for larger hints Also, if you only want to know the answer, scroll down further
There is a bigger clue Today's puzzle is full of traps Try to solve the purple category first and concentrate on the yellow
Now for the answer to today's game #409, Connections
Drum roll please
There seems to be a trend this week of puzzles getting easier as the day goes on, starting at 37 and today we're told it's 24
I always wondered why the puzzles were so low in difficulty, with so many traps for easy puzzles It's not surprising that many puzzlers fail today If you get caught up in trying to fit the yellow and purple around the traps without knocking them down first, I think you'll really get tripped up
The first trap I got stuck in was around the blue category
I immediately saw a calf and a kid I immediately saw a fawn and a foal I was wrong kid is a fawn, so it could have been a kid, but kid got me there was also a Kit, so I switched the two and got the blue category
The second trap for me was related to body parts and chicken fillets I was trying to push shoulders, ribs, breasts, and thighs into one category It didn't work The second trap
Shortly thereafter, I was able to clear that tricky part of the chicken cut
The purple and yellow categories were then easy to fill This is unusual since the yellow category is usually a fairly straightforward hole to fill
The purple category was also interesting, but by the time I got to ladders, firings, shoulders, and muscles, I was ready to exit this category
I'm reading this late in the day According to Connections Companion, the difficulty level was 3 out of 5
Days like today are when I have to think about what purple categories I like and dislike Of the similarities, I dislike “words minus one letter” the most
It should be easier than yesterday's puzzle, but I struggled today
My first strike was trying to line up the yellow category with charlatans, hot dogs, peacocks, and showboats instead of ham in the blue category In general, I think it works, but it definitely fits the scam, quackery, and sham
Here's where the problem arose I just couldn't figure out the connection between the green word and the purple word For too long I had noise, sound, speed, and just hoped another word would fit, only to get two strikes in a row because I was forcing it
I was finally able to narrow it down to noise, sound, beep, tweet, word when I decided to just cross out words that didn't fit at all
Still, I don't think word fits into the Utterance category
Anyway, the purple category remained, and despite my love of Looney Tunes, I found no joy in this category
On some days, my mind would go against me, and in my case, I stared blankly at the screen for longer than I wanted to admit It was empty
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