logo
NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Sunday, June 15th

NYT ‘Connections' Hints And Answers For Sunday, June 15th

Forbes14-06-2025
Looking for Saturday's NYT Connections hints, clues and answers instead? You can find them here:
Lazy Sunday is here and frankly I might have to just relent today and actually be lazy for once. After all, it's also Father's Day. As a dad, I get to do whatever I want on Father's Day. I can stay in bed all morning. I don't have to clean or take care of plants or pets. I can make others do the cooking and chores for me. I get to pick the movie we watch or the games we play. I am the king of my domain! But first, before we get to all that, we have some Connections to make. Happy Father's Day to all you dads out there who, like me, will actually probably do quite a bit on their special day.
Connections is the second-most popular NYT Games puzzle game outside of the main crossword itself, and an extremely fun, free offering that will get your brain moving every day. Play it right here.
The goal is to take a group of 16 words and find links between four pairs of four of them. They could be specific categories of terms, or they could be little world puzzles where words may come before or after them you need to figure out. And they get more complicated from there.
There is only one set of right answers for this, and you only get a certain number of tries so you can't just spam around until you find something. There are difficulty tiers coded by color, which will usually go from yellow, blue/green to purple as difficulty increases, so know that going in and when you start linking them together.
You pick the four words you think are linked and either you will get a solve and a lit up row that shows you how you were connected. If you're close, it will tell you that you're one away. Again, four mistakes you lose, but if you want to know the answers without failing, either come here, or delete your web cookies and try again. If you want to play more puzzles, you can get an NYT Games subscription to access the full archives of all past puzzles.
These are the hints that are laid out on the puzzle board itself, but after that, we will get into spoiler territory with some hints and eventually the answers.
Today's Connections
Screenshot: Erik Kain
Alright, the full spoilers follow here as we get into what the groups are today:
The full-on answers are below for each group, finally inserting the four words in each category. Spoilers follow if you do not want to get this far. The Connections answers are:
Today's Connections
Screenshot: Erik Kain
I screwed up on one guess today, which I think is the first time since I've been handling the Sunday Connections Guide that I've done that. I'm just that good (or that lucky). I guessed LANGUAGE / NUDITY / SMOKING / CURSES, which frankly is as good as ACTION for a Connection if you ask me. In fact, CURSES or swear words are one of the main considerations for how a movie is rated. Call it a headfake or a cheap shot, but I replaced that with ACTION and it worked. I wasn't sure what the purple words were but it made sense once I got them. A bubble bursts or pops, you can call your dad 'pop' (happy Father's Day!) and some people call SODA pop (weirdos) and of course, pop-culture is just POPULAR culture. I sort of wish CONNECTIONS would give us more than 16 words, with a couple of options that don't fit at all, which would make getting that last row a bit harder. Maybe that's masochistic of me. In any case, that's a wrap, folks!
How did you do on today's Connections? Let me know on Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook. Also be sure to subscribe to my YouTube channel and follow me here on this blog. Sign up for my newsletter for more reviews and commentary on entertainment and culture.
FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™
Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase
Pinpoint By Linkedin
Guess The Category
Queens By Linkedin
Crown Each Region
Crossclimb By Linkedin
Unlock A Trivia Ladder
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Emily Blunt Debuts a Platinum Blonde Bob on the Devil Wears Prada 2 Set
Emily Blunt Debuts a Platinum Blonde Bob on the Devil Wears Prada 2 Set

Vogue

time16 minutes ago

  • Vogue

Emily Blunt Debuts a Platinum Blonde Bob on the Devil Wears Prada 2 Set

Are you wearing…the bleach blonde bob? Yes, Emily Blunt is. Filming is well underway for The Devil Wears Prada sequel, and with it, an avalanche of paparazzi photos that give a glimpse into some of the costume and styling choices for both established and new cast members. And while Anne Hathaway as Andy Sachs has retained her long, brunette hair, and Meryl Streep's Miranda Priestly sports her trademark ash blonde, severe super crop, it looks like Emily Blunt as Emily Charlton might go through some dramatic hair transformations. Just a few weeks ago, images from the set showed Blunt as Emily with some copper red hair, her character's signature shade. It marked the first time Blunt has returned to that shade following her breakout role in the original film, having experimented with more caramel blondes and shades of brunette over the years. The sharp-tongued assistant to Runway editor-in-chief is remembered as much for her acerbic words to Andy and not being the girl to go to Paris, as she is her chestnut red shade. It was a high fashion, editorial, almost villainous red. Blunt, who was 23 at the time, dyed her then-brunette hair for the the years, Blunt—who is a natural blonde—has experimented with plenty of brunette and blonde shades, but in recent times, she's kept to a lighter shade of brunette with warm blonde highlights toward the mid and lower lengths of her hair, giving her fine lengths some soft depth and movement. Color analysis defines Emily Blunt as a 'true summer,' with cool undertones—it means the actor can pool off cool, soft, and muted shades, like light browns, ashy and icy blonde.

Your Fall Global Culture Calendar: The Best Theater, Art, TV, Film, Dance and Books
Your Fall Global Culture Calendar: The Best Theater, Art, TV, Film, Dance and Books

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Your Fall Global Culture Calendar: The Best Theater, Art, TV, Film, Dance and Books

We get it. There aren't enough hours in the day (or airline miles in your account) to get to everything worth seeing this fall. That's why Pursuits editors have compiled a list of what we believe will be the cream of the crop—the books, exhibitions, performances and movies that everyone will be talking about. If you can see more than one of the below, count yourself among the lucky few. ART Man Ray: When Objects Dream Man Ray (1890-1976) is best known for inventing the rayograph, an artwork made by placing objects such as feathers, wine glasses and coiled springs on or near photo paper and exposing them to light, producing X-ray-like prints. A huge new show will feature about 60 of these works, along with roughly 100 other pieces from the 1910s and '20s. Sept. 14–Feb. 1 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store