
NYT Connections For Today, December 2, 2025: If you play NYT Connections regularly, then here is today’s guide to help you solve the December 2, 2025 puzzle. Whether you’re stuck or just curious, this article gives you the full word list, category, hints, answers, and breakdown of how to solve them. Scroll down and boost your win-streak:
NYT Connections is a daily word puzzle game published by The New York Times. Slowly with its rise, it has become one of the paper's most popular games, second only to Wordle.
In this game you are presented with a 4x4 grid of 16 words. Your goal is to sort these 16 words into four groups of four based on a shared category or connection. You can play it for free on the New York Times Games website or app.
ANGEL
MET
SUGAR
BALLPARK
MOMA
ROUGH
BROW
SHOOT
DADA
RAY
GENERAL
FRICK
BROAD
FUDGE
ROYAL
SISI
Yellow Group: Approximate or not exact
Green Group: mild swear
Blue Group: Team names
Purple Group: Family nickname letter
Yellow Group: Words meaning approximate or indefinite estimate.
Green Group: Mild, family-friendly exclamations or light substitutes for swear words.
Blue Group: Names associated with Major League Baseball teams or players.
Purple Group: Words that resemble a familiar family-member nickname with an extra letter at the end.
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Yellow Group: BALLPARK, ROUGH, BROAD, GENERAL
Green Group: FRICK, SHOOT, SUGAR, FUDGE
Blue Group: ANGEL, ROYAL, MET, RAY
Purple Group: BROW, SISI, DADA, MOMA
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Scan for easy patterns first. Look for mild expletives or approximate words, these are often quickest to group.
Watch for proper nouns or known names like the team names, associations or familiar names that often point to a group.
Don’t ignore word-shapes. If a word seems childish or nickname-like, try thinking of family-nicknames, these sometimes form a tricky group.
Use the process of elimination. Once obvious groups are formed, leftover words often fall into the trickier category, even if they don’t immediately seem related.
Think meaning, not spelling only because some groups rely on sense (meaning or usage), others on patterns like sound or cultural reference.
Today’s edition balanced easy-to-spot synonyms and expressions. So play well and all the best for tomorrow.
For more such stories, stay tuned to HerZindagi.
Image credit: New York Times and Freepik
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