Today’s tips and answers NYT Connections, Wednesday, February 12

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Do you need tips for today’s connections on Wednesday, February 12? This mysterious game can be extremely demanding, especially if today’s motives are not your jam. If you are a bit struggling, don’t worry about it; This connection guide will come to the rescue.

Whenever the connection puzzles become too complex, a little aid is welcome, right? Without spoiling anything, this guide will give you some tips. Scroll a little further and you will also find a full solution.

In this guide:

Here are 16 words of connections:

Shakespeare Rattlesnake Android Rollerblade
Song Title Skateboard Sketch
Donut Dance Act Saxophone
Certificate Monologue Pacifier Receipt

How to play

Connections is one of the most popular (and demanding) daily puzzle games published by The New York Times. The purpose of the connections is to group 16 words of the day for four groups, in which each group of four words has a common topic.

For example, the words “Hook”, “Nana”, “Peter” and “Wendy” are the characters of Peter Pan. Or to take another example, “Action”, “Ballpark”, “Go” and “Stick” are all words that often appear just before the word “drawing”.

Your task is to find out what these topics combine different words together – but be careful, because for a lot of time there are misleading combinations with red herring placed only to lose you! To win the game, you need to find all four connections without making 4 mistakes. During the fourth error, the game ended and the answer is revealed automatically.

Each of the four groups in the puzzle every day is also attributed to a different color, which represents how straightforward or complex to find a connection. These colors are: yellow (easiest), green (straightforward), blue (medium) and purple (the most complex).

Click here Play the connection puzzle!


The connections indicate Wednesday, February 12

Here are your tips for today:

  • Yellow: You’ll get it when you buy something.
  • Green: These words can be made.
  • Blue: This category is associated with a popular television program.
  • Purple: Think of an venerable but popular song that has been discussed several times.
  • Additional tip 1: Each group has a word that starts with “D” – except purple.
  • Additional tip 2: To find a purple group, you only need the first half of each word.

If you need a little more aid, touch the spoiler text below to reveal one word belonging to each group:

  • Yellow: Title
  • Green: Dance
  • Blue: Donut
  • Purple: Android

A warning about the spoiler! Today’s connection groups are revealed below!


What are today’s connection groups?

If you need an even bigger tip to determine today’s puzzle, below we will reveal four correct connection groups – topics that combine each set of four words in the connection grid.

Here are connections groups for today:

  • Yellow: Property documents
  • Green: Bits in a diverse program
  • Blue: Proverbs for the characters in “The Simpsons”
  • Purple: Starting with “Shake, Ratch and Roll”

Now that you know the motives of various connections in today’s puzzle, see if you can solve them! If not, check the full answer below.


A warning about the spoiler! Today’s connections the answer is ahead of us!


What is today’s response to calls?

Here is the answer to today’s connection puzzle on Wednesday, February 12:

  • Yellow: Property documents (certificate, act, receipt, title)
  • Green: Bits in a Variety show (dance, monologue, sketch, song)
  • Blue: Proverbs for the characters in “The Simpsons”
  • Purple: Starting with “Shake, Rattle and Roll” (Android, Rattlesnake, Rollerblade, Shakespeare)

Here are the answers from February 12. |. Image loan: Rock Paper Strzelba/NYT

Today’s puzzle began so well for me … and then I left with a total loss, with only blue and purple words on my plate. Yellow and green were fine – “Title” and “Song” belonging to different categories are a trick, but they are straightforward to tear when you put a “certificate”, “act” and “receipt”. After I thought a bit, I realized that every word of the green group could count as a full performance, which helped me exclude the word “saxophone”. But for that …

As you could guess now, I have never watched Simpsons. Sure, I know the program, but this is not enough to know about character props (but I know a donut). Combine it without knowing the song “Shake, Ratt and Roll” – by the way, what is Banger – and you have particularly complex puzzles on your hands. Funny in combinations is that today’s puzzle could be total for you if you just have the knowledge I miss.

So a tiny story; I looked stupidly at the blue and purple groups and finally I realized that two words start with “rattles” and “shake” – it can’t be an accident, right? I found that the rest from there, but I needed Google.

Congratulations, if you have today’s connections, answer well, with or without the aid of our handy tips above! And if you are not successful today, don’t worry – the recent puzzle is published every day at midnight, so you can try again tomorrow, just like Wordle!

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