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NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10: How many did you guess right?

Time of India2 days ago

NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10, 2025: NYT Connections, the hottest and highly intriguing new word game from The New York Times, has taken social media by storm. It requires a good vocabulary and some innovative thinking, which makes it a compelling affair.
Wordsmiths who attempt the puzzle need to sort a grid of 16 words with seemingly nothing in common into four groups of four, using the underlying common associations. The aim is to identify these 16 words that belong to a common category. The words are divided into four categories: Yellow (easiest), Green (medium), Blue (hard), and Purple (hardest). With that, here's a look at the hints and solutions for NYT Connections' latest edition.
NYT Connections: June 10 categories hints
These hints are a valuable asset for those looking for some inspiration in their quest to solve the puzzle
Yellow Category – Used to resolve a disagreement between individuals
Green Category – Commonly found on official papers
Blue Category – Popular or widely used during the 1980s
Purple Category – It's your _ _ _ !
NYT Connections: June 10 solutions
If you have given up on solving the quiz despite numerous attempts and are struggling to think differently, then look no further as here are the answers:
Yellow Group: Chair, Judge, Mediate, Moderate
Green Group: Chart, Image, Table, Text Box
Blue Group: Chill, Psych, Radical, Word
Purple Group: Civic, Customs, Heavy, Jury
About NYT Connections
It is quite easy to access NYT Connections on the publication's website. . To play, you need to select four words you feel have something in common and hit the 'submit' button. If the answer is accurate, the words will be grouped together and the category will be disclosed with the corresponding colour. However, if you make a mistake you will lose one of your four chances. In other words, make four mistakes and it is 'game over' for you. So, think well and shine bright

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NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10: How many did you guess right?
NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10: How many did you guess right?

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Time of India

NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10: How many did you guess right?

NYT Connections hints and answers for June 10, 2025: NYT Connections, the hottest and highly intriguing new word game from The New York Times, has taken social media by storm. It requires a good vocabulary and some innovative thinking, which makes it a compelling affair. Wordsmiths who attempt the puzzle need to sort a grid of 16 words with seemingly nothing in common into four groups of four, using the underlying common associations. The aim is to identify these 16 words that belong to a common category. The words are divided into four categories: Yellow (easiest), Green (medium), Blue (hard), and Purple (hardest). With that, here's a look at the hints and solutions for NYT Connections' latest edition. NYT Connections: June 10 categories hints These hints are a valuable asset for those looking for some inspiration in their quest to solve the puzzle Yellow Category – Used to resolve a disagreement between individuals Green Category – Commonly found on official papers Blue Category – Popular or widely used during the 1980s Purple Category – It's your _ _ _ ! NYT Connections: June 10 solutions If you have given up on solving the quiz despite numerous attempts and are struggling to think differently, then look no further as here are the answers: Yellow Group: Chair, Judge, Mediate, Moderate Green Group: Chart, Image, Table, Text Box Blue Group: Chill, Psych, Radical, Word Purple Group: Civic, Customs, Heavy, Jury About NYT Connections It is quite easy to access NYT Connections on the publication's website. . To play, you need to select four words you feel have something in common and hit the 'submit' button. If the answer is accurate, the words will be grouped together and the category will be disclosed with the corresponding colour. However, if you make a mistake you will lose one of your four chances. In other words, make four mistakes and it is 'game over' for you. So, think well and shine bright

Iran's Khamenei calls US nuclear proposal against national interest
Iran's Khamenei calls US nuclear proposal against national interest

Hindustan Times

time04-06-2025

  • Hindustan Times

Iran's Khamenei calls US nuclear proposal against national interest

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Wednesday a US proposal for a nuclear agreement was against the national interest, amid sharp differences over whether Tehran can continue to enrich uranium. The longtime foes have held five rounds of talks since April to thrash out a new accord to replace the deal with major powers that US President Donald Trump abandoned during his first term in 2018. On Saturday, Iran said it had received "elements" of the US proposal through Omani mediators, the details of which have not been publicly disclosed. "The proposal presented by the Americans is 100 percent against" notions of independence and self-reliance, Khamenei said in a televised speech, invoking ideals of the 1979 Islamic revolution. "Independence means not waiting for the green light from America and the likes of America." Iran's enrichment of uranium has emerged as a major point of contention. Trump said on Monday his administration would not allow "any" enrichment, despite Tehran's insistence it is its right under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Khamenei said enrichment is "key" to Iran's nuclear programme and that the United States "cannot have a say" on the issue. "If we have 100 nuclear power plants but don't have enrichment, they will be of no use to us," because "nuclear power plants need fuel" to operate, he said. "If we cannot produce this fuel domestically, we have to reach out to the United States, which may have dozens of conditions." The New York Times reported Tuesday that the US proposal includes "an arrangement that would allow Iran to continue enriching uranium at low levels" as the US and other countries "work out a more detailed plan intended to block Iran's path to a nuclear weapon". It said the proposal would see the United States facilitating "the building of nuclear power plants for Iran and negotiate the construction of enrichment facilities managed by a consortium of regional countries". Iran has previously said it is open to temporary limits on its enrichment of uranium, and is willing to consider the establishment of a regional nuclear fuel consortium. But it has stressed that such a consortium is "in no way intended to replace Iran's own uranium enrichment programme". Iran's chief negotiator, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, said in a Wednesday post on X: No enrichment, no deal. No nuclear weapons, we have a deal." On Monday, Araghchi held talks in Cairo with Rafael Grossi, head of the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency. In its latest quarterly report last week, the IAEA said Iran had further stepped up its production of highly enriched uranium. In a separate report, it also criticised "less than satisfactory" cooperation from Tehran, particularly in explaining past cases of nuclear material found at undeclared sites. Iran currently enriches uranium to 60 percent, far above the 3.67-percent limit set in the 2015 deal but still short of the 90 percent threshold needed for a nuclear warhead. The reports came ahead of a planned IAEA Board of Governors meeting in Vienna later this month which will review Iran's nuclear activities. Washington and other Western governments have continued to accuse Iran of seeking a nuclear weapons capability. Iran insists its programme is for peaceful purposes only. The 2015 deal provided Iran with relief from international sanctions in return for UN-monitored restrictions on its nuclear activities. Trump reimposed US sanctions when he quit the agreement in 2018 and has since tightened them with secondary sanctions against third parties who violate them. Britain, France and Germany, the three European countries who were party to the 2015 deal, are currently weighing whether to trigger the sanctions "snapback" mechanism in the accord. The mechanism would reinstate UN sanctions in response to Iranian non-compliance -- an option that expires in October. Iran has criticised the IAEA report as unbalanced, saying it relied on "forged documents" provided by its arch foe Israel.

Edmund White, queer literature icon & author of ‘A Boy's Own Story' dies at 85
Edmund White, queer literature icon & author of ‘A Boy's Own Story' dies at 85

Mint

time04-06-2025

  • Mint

Edmund White, queer literature icon & author of ‘A Boy's Own Story' dies at 85

Edmund White, the influential American novelist who chronicled gay life through his semi-autobiographical work, including dozens of books, several short stories and countless articles and essays, has died, his agent said Wednesday. He was 85. "Ed passed last night at home in NYC (New York City) of natural causes," agent Bill Clegg told AFP, adding White is survived by his husband Michael Carroll and a sister. The literary pioneer's books includes "Forgetting Elena," his celebrated debut novel from 1973, "A Boy's Own Story," his 1982 coming-of-age exploration of sexual identity, and multiple memoirs, notably the revelatory "The Loves of My Life" published this year. From his earliest publications, homosexuality was at the heart of his writing -- from the 1950s, when being gay was considered a mental illness, to the sexual liberation after the Stonewall riots in 1969, which he witnessed firsthand. Then came the AIDS years that decimated an entire generation. White himself would be affected directly -- he was diagnosed HIV positive in 1985 and lived with the condition for four decades. Tributes to the award-winning writer began pouring in on social media, including from his longtime friend and fellow prolific American author Joyce Carol Oates. "There has been no one like Edmund White!" Oates posted on X. "Astonishing stylistic versatility, boldly pioneering subject matter; darkly funny; a friend to so many over decades." Fellow author and playwright Paul Rudnick said on X that White was a "gay icon" whose novels, memoirs and non-fiction "changed and enhanced American literature." White was an avid traveler, spending years researching biographies of French authors Jean Genet and Marcel Proust. In the 1970s he co-wrote "The Joy of Gay Sex," a how-to guide and resource on relationships, which was a queer counter to "The Joy of Sex," the hugely popular 1972 illustrated sex manual. In the 2010s White suffered two strokes and a heart attack. But he kept writing. In this year's "The Loves of My Life," he recalled all the men he had loved -- White numbered his sexual partners at some 3,000. The New York Times described the book as "gaspingly graphic, jaunty and tender." White himself acknowledged that literature was a powerful conduit for revealing the intimate sides of ourselves. "The most important things in our intimate lives can't be discussed with strangers, except in books," as he once wrote.

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