The NYT’s Connections hints and answers for the March 29 edition are available, and fans struggling to get the answers on their own can use this guide. Today’s categories consist of a different mix of four things and items a person would use at a fancy place. In Connections, a grid of sixteen words is divided into four groups of four, representing a specific category. Each category is color-coded on account of difficulty.
Here is the NYT Connections hint and answer for March 29.
Connections hint for March 29
The hint for March 29’s edition of Connections includes the following four categories:
- Category 1 – Something a person uses at a premium or exquisite establishment.
- Category 2 – Four different kinds of the same type of clothing.
- Category 3 – Four different words that are often used in a popular phrase, either multiple times or once
- Category 4 – Four things released during the same time frame.
Here are the category names and color codes to further aid you in getting the answers.
- Yellow – Fancy dining materials.
- Green – Types of shorts
- Blue – Nouns part of a famous palindrome.
- Purple – Movies that came out in 1985.
What are the Connections answers for today, March 29?
The answers for March 29’s NYT Connections are:
- YELLOW – CHINA, CRYSTAL, LINEN, SILVER
- GREEN – BERMUDA, BIKE, BOXER, CARGO
- BLUE – CANAL, MAN, PANAMA, PLAN
- PURPLE – BRAZIL, CLUE, COMMANDO, WITNESS
In the yellow category, people who often dine in exquisite places and interact with material typical of those places will be able to easily get CHINA, CRYSTAL, and SILVER. LINEN is, however, incredibly tricky out of all of them since it’s also a type of clothing material.
Meanwhile, in the green category, BERMUDA, BOXER, and CARGO are quickly figured out if one thinks deeply. This is because they are the most common types of shorts. BIKE is tricky and requires a combination of deep thinking and trial and error to get.
As for the blue category, the words will be hard to guess if one is unfamiliar with one of the most famous palindromes, “A man, a plan, a canal-Panama.” However, if one looks at each of the words closely and finds a common thread shared between them – the letters “AN” they can easily figure out all four words.
Then, in the purple category, movie buffs familiar with 80s movies can figure out all four words.
