Happy New Year’s, puzzle solvers! I’m sure everyone is busy with the holidays, so I’ll keep the preamble brief. We have a Mini Crossword to solve, so let’s solve it! The NYT Mini is a ...
Sadly, while many delicious salad recipes exist, countless store-bought salad dressings have the potential to ruin your healthy chow down experience. And though making your own dressing is ...
Let’s solve today’s! The NYT Mini is a smaller, quicker, more digestible, bite-sized version of the larger and more challenging NYT Crossword, and unlike its larger sibling, it’s free-to ...
IBM (49D: Co. that introduced the hard disk drive) This clue made me curious about when ... Thank you, Beth, for this great puzzle.
FRI (38D: Day after Thurs.) It's a small thing, but it makes me happy that this puzzle is appearing on Friday (FRI.). UTAH (55D: Salt Lake City's state) Salt Lake City is the capital of UTAH.
The Times Crossword welcomes hundreds of debut entries every year. In the spirit of end-of-year RECAPS — debuted in 1957, with the clue [Certain tires] — we asked the Times puzzle editors and ...
Love crossword ... puzzle takes most players just over a minute to solve). While The Mini is smaller and simpler than a normal crossword, it isn’t always easy. Tripping up on one clue can ...
We’ve distilled some highlights of the year in Chicago news into this crossword puzzle, which will surely bring our city so much joy that we will instantly have a budget and a teachers’ contract.
Themeless clues should be more difficult and require imaginative thinking. Show us your wit and wordplay! There are many options for making a crossword puzzle, including the good, old-fashioned ...
Strands and Connections puzzles. The Mini Crossword is always longer on Saturdays — 16 clues and answers as opposed to 10. I didn't find today's too tough, except that as a child of the 1980s ...
Click here for today's Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands and Connections puzzles ... because the Across clues were all obvious ...