Mini Crossword: Crawley, Downton Abbey Countess & Other Hints for February 28
Are you ready to solve and find the answers to the for February 28, 2025, with the help of hints? This puzzle game is quite different from the traditional long crosswords. In mini crosswords, players work with a simple 5 x 5 grid and fill in words across and down. Additionally, there is in-game assistance available to help make the process smoother.
Here are the hints and clues for the NYT Mini Crossword for February 28, 2025. These clues showcase intriguing themes like movies, shows, cartoon characters, celebrities, and daily-use items.
Yesterday's puzzle featured hints related to messages to office staff, a calculator key, a renowned casino, so-so, a pronoun pair, and many others.
ACROSS
1A Italian tourist city you might be 'inclined' to visit
5A Pink/orange shade
6A Green/yellow shade
7A Red/pink shade
8A Silver/gray shade
DOWN
1D Many collared golf shirts
2D From Dublin or Derry
3D Command+S, on a Mac
4D Pint at a public house
5D _ Crawley, 'Downton Abbey' countess
As the game has already concluded, let's uncover the answers for the NYT Mini Crossword from February 28, 2025.
ACROSS
1A PISA
5A CORAL
6A OLIVE
7A ROSE
8A ASH
DOWN
1D POLOS
2D IRIS
3D SAVE
4D ALE
5D CORA
Today's game featured a captivating mix of clues, including references to an Italian tourist, various shades of color, collared gold shirts, and the Countess from Downton Abbey. The puzzle was relatively straightforward but still posed a challenge. For players who regularly engage with this puzzle game, today's edition may have felt easier due to the hints provided.
This was all for today's NYT Mini Crosswords. Do come back again to check out a new puzzle with exciting clues.
The post Mini Crossword: Crawley, Downton Abbey Countess & Other Hints for February 28 appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.
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Eater
an hour ago
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In our experience, the best food-related Father's Day gifts check some combination of feeling personal, kitsch, useful, and delicious. There is no one right way to be a father or a father-like figure, or shop for one, but it feels fair to say that our most successful Father's Day presents have either fulfilled a hyper-specific need, such as a kneeling foam pad for herb gardening, or celebrated our food-loving fathers' rituals around grilling, fishing, or making truckloads of their deceased Italian mother's marinara on Sundays. Riposa in pace , nonna! Your son has become a worthy sauce master in your stead. Father's Day falls on June 15 this year, which means you have a little over a week to smash the order button on some Snake River Farms steaks or a high-tech Ooni pizza oven. Should you seriously procrastinate, there are always two-day shipping options from Amazon Prime, and retailers such as Nordstrom provide an estimate of the soonest day an order can arrive. Plus, you can also opt for day-of, shipping-free digital gifts, such as a Southern cooking MasterClass with James Beard Award–winning chef Mashama Bailey, or a gift card to Williams Sonoma. Your dad is the best dad out of all the dads, of course, so let's find him the perfect present, whether that means something to throw on the grill (or in the Igloo cooler) or a themed apron that harkens back to his days following the Grateful Dead. Barbecue is an incredible edible art form, and as any brisket- and rib-loving dad knows, opinions run hot about which regional barbecue reigns supreme. That's why we love this Pitmaster Icons gift set from Goldbelly; it features delectable sauces from Kansas City's Joe's KC BBQ; Rodney Scott's Whole Hog BBQ, the James Beard award-winning restaurant in Charleston, South Carolina; world-famous Franklin Barbecue in Austin; Snow's BBQ, the beloved Lexington, Texas spot; and a sauce created by North Carolina pitmaster Ed Mitchell. Five sauces, five distinct styles, countless delicious meals grilled by Dad. Plus, thanks to Goldbelly's quick shipping, this set makes a great last-minute gift. Speaking of condiments that feel extra-giftable, for the dad who loves to add heat to his eggs, noodles, sandwiches, or pizza, a jar of carefully selected chile crisp is a great way to broaden his horizons. We like Boon Sauce from chef Max Boonthanakit of LA's Michelin-recommended restaurant Camphor, which remixes the classic Chinese seasoning with the addition of crispy anchovies, shallots, and fennel. It can be spooned right onto breakfast, lunch, or dinner, or be incorporated into sauces and salad dressings. Look, no disrespect to Dad's massive jar of Folger's, but he might not even realize that we're in the fourth wave of coffee by now (maybe even the fifth?) and there are top-tier instant coffees out there that could be blowing his mind every morning while he gets his caffeine fix. 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The fact that Elon Musk kicked off this week's emo bloodbath with the words 'I'm sorry, but' has got to be the realest-housewives part of it. 'I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore,' Musk posted to X on Tuesday. Bless his heart — he sounded really contrite. Then he consulted a 'Downton Abbey' phrasebook and found 'disgusting abomination' to poshly trash Donald Trump's 'big beautiful bill.' He kept huffing his own X fumes through Wednesday until, on Thursday at 2:30 p.m., Trump all-capped him on Truth Social: 'CRAZY!' Off to the races. Everyone has their favorite part of Thursday's cage match. I was instantly startled by the non-pettiness: Musk gunning for Trump's impeachment, Trump gunning for Musk's financial ruin. All amid a cacophonous peanut gallery that included Ye, MAGA billionaire Bill Ackman and Musk ex Ashley St. Clair. But the Trump-Musk feud is not just a clash of two madmen; it is a clash between the two fiercest social-media influencers of all time. Trump and Musk are human memes, forged on Twitter and its spinoffs, X and Truth Social. Their rise, their public personas, their marriage of convenience and their falling out took place in short-form posts and the freestyle cultivation of likes and engagement. Their feud is in many ways a story of our times: It reveals how online power struggles work now — with rivals leveraging online fanbases, battling for authority across platforms and aiming for the ultimate flex: starving the opponent of any attention at all. Long before most, both Trump and Musk understood that traditional PR handlers would sterilize their personas, blunt the trolling potential of their best material and interfere with their relationships with fans. Trump built his political identity on Twitter, beating his chest and savaging his foes with a rawness that used to make his every utterance on Twitter unmissable. Musk built his celebrity through it, too, with runic tweets, like 'laws are on one side, poets on the other.' In late 2021, he was so proud of his philosopher-king status that he considered going pro: 'thinking of quitting my jobs & becoming an influencer full-time wdyt,' he tweeted, to 371,000 likes. The Musk-Trump bond, but also the tension in it, has also been defined by these platforms. It heated up in the fall of 2022, when Trump was in exile from Twitter and out of the White House. Metabolizing pandemic redpills, Musk was still half-heartedly striking a neoliberal pose, only recently having supported Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020. But he was also slagging Twitter for having banished groypers, conspiracy-mongers and especially Trump, its star, for insurrectioning. That's when Musk bought Twitter for $44 billion. He claims now he knew he was vastly overpaying — and in February he said X is worth 'like, eight cents' — but the expense was for a noble cause: to restore freedom of speech and welcome @realDonaldTrump back to the green pastures of his social-media homeland. In November of that year, Musk polled X, and a slight majority said Trump should be reinstated. 'The people have spoken,' Musk posted. 'Vox Populi, Vox Dei.' The voice of people is the voice of God. Right. But then, if we're just talking about the course of human events, something extremely cruel happened, a monumental act of Trumpian ingratitude. After his account was reinstated, Trump didn't come back. For nine long months, @realDonaldTrump met Musk's devastatingly expensive largesse with stony silence. Trump, of course, had built his own dopey Twitter dupe, Truth Social, and he probably liked no longer being someone else's tenant, vulnerable to eviction. He also probably liked looking down at the world's richest man from his own social-media castle. When asked when he'd go home to Musk-owned, Trump-friendly Twitter, Trump said, coldly, 'I don't see any reason for it.' Trump was betting that he had made Twitter powerful, not the other way around. If Musk had hoped to spend his days evading the fun police with Trump on Twitter, he might have been hurt that Trump didn't even bother to visit Musk's platform, which he renamed X in July 2023, until he had a mugshot to post in August of that year, after his indictment for a scheme to overturn election results in Georgia. The next summer, on July 13, 2024, Musk endorsed Trump, and soon started whooping and jumping and dancing like 2005 Tom Cruise. He tilted hard right for his hero, and he mostly did it on X, amplifying Dark MAGA posts, from Covid denial to QAnon praise. Tesla's stock tanked. Musk muted his environmentalist leanings. He lost his close friends, including Sam Harris and Philip Low. A month after the endorsement, Trump graced X with his presence with a campaign video. It was only the second time he'd posted to X since Musk rolled out the red carpet for him. In the last months of his campaign, while Musk's money and adulation surged his way, Trump finally managed to show Musk the occasional courtesy of using the platform Musk had bought, furnished and upholstered in part for him. Flash forward to last week. On Monday, June 2, three days before the Trump-Musk affair came utterly undone, @realDonaldTrump posted to X for what looks like the last time: a manly boast video about his steel tariffs. It was scored with what sounded like pounding Christian rock. These tariffs, which Trump increased to fully 50 percent last week, will raise the cost of imported car components, including at Tesla, and further imperil Musk's fortune. For Trump to crow about this insult to Tesla in Musk's own house when they were still acting like pals and Musk was mostly keeping mum about the 'big beautiful bill' (which if it passes will also injure Tesla) — this seems like the unkindest cut of the whole match made in hell. The end of last week's social-media spat reveals that the heavyweight champ of social-media influence is still Trump. At the news that Musk's net worth fell by $34 billion during the spat, while Tesla's market value sank by $153 billion, Musk waved a white flag. He deleted or retracted his incendiary X posts — the innuendo about Trump and the Epstein files and the threat to decommission a spacecraft. Trump, for his part, took back nothing. He now says he rejects a make-up call. He's selling the pretty red Tesla Musk presented to him. And most importantly, he's back to ghosting X. No posts there since Monday. By Friday he was on Truth Social praising Commerce Secretary Scott Bessent, one of Musk's most aggressive rivals for Trump's favor and the one whose April shouting match with Musk came to blows, according to Steve Bannon. On Sunday, Musk gave perhaps the clearest sign that he is tapping out: He screenshotted a Truth Social post by Trump in which the president called Gavin Newsom 'Governor Gavin Newscum' — and posted it admiringly to X. No commentary, no irony, no comeback. Just a tribute. In the posting wars, this is what bending the knee looks like: one man obsequiously signal-boosting the other, on the platform he couldn't lure him back to.