


























Strands
NYT
Looking for Monday’s Strands hints, spangram and answers? You can find them here:
ForbesToday’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers For Monday, May 4 (May The Forest Be With You)
You may not get this Strands puzzle today if you’re on the younger side. I’m just around the cutoff myself, but I still had trouble with some of these answers.
The New York Times’ Strands puzzle is a play on the classic word search. It’s in beta for now, which means it’ll only stick around if enough people play it every day.
There’s a new game of Strands to play every day. The game will present you with a six by eight grid of letters. The aim is to find a group of words that have something in common, and you’ll get a clue as to what that theme is. When you find a theme word, it will remain highlighted in blue.
You’ll also need to find a special word called a spangram. This tells you what the words have in common. The spangram links two opposite sides of the board. While the theme words will not be a proper name, the spangram can be a proper name. When you find the spangram, it will remain highlighted in yellow.
Be warned: You’ll need to be on your toes.
“Some themes are fill-in-the-blank phrases. They may also be steps in a process, items that all belong to the same category, synonyms or homophones,” The New York Times notes. “Just as she varies the difficulty of Wordle puzzles within a week, [Wordle and Strands editor Tracy] Bennett plans to throw Strands solvers curveballs every once in a while.”
Time to do the NYT hint and then my own hint after that:
Get up!
And mine is:
beeep beeep beeep
Here are the first two letters of all the words if you don’t want the entire thing just yet.
Now we begin the answer portion of the program which is the spangram and the full list of the other answers, the spangram is:
BRANCHOUT
Here it is on the page, and read on:
Strands
NYT
The answers are:
Strands
NYT
Everyone on earth uses their phone to wake up now, and I suppose that has most of these, but we’re going older school in the era that had radios and tuners to use those radios. You could wake up with an alarm or music or a program on the radio. The radio is like what Spotify is now except you had to listen to whatever happened to be on at any given time. Imagine that!
Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram.
Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。