Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Before You Scroll: Spoiler Safety
- Quick Snapshot: What You’re Solving on 24-August-2025
- Hints for 24-August-2025 (Spoiler-Light)
- Answers for 24-August-2025 (Full Spoilers)
- Why These Connections Work (And Why They Mess With You)
- The Grid’s Sneakiest Traps on This Date
- How to Solve Connections Faster Next Time
- Mini Walkthrough: A Clean Solve Path for Puzzle #805
- of Real-World Connections Experience (Because This Game Is a Lifestyle Now)
- Conclusion
It’s Sunday, and your brain would like to do two things: (1) relax and (2) win at NYT Connections anyway.
If you’re here for hints, I’ve got you. If you’re here for answers, I’ve got those too.
And if you’re here because you confidently grouped four words, hit “Submit,” and Connections politely told you
“Absolutely not,” welcome to the clubmembership is free, but the emotional damage is priceless.
Before You Scroll: Spoiler Safety
This article is structured like a good puzzle buddy: it starts with spoiler-light nudges and gradually gets more revealing.
If you still want to solve the grid yourself, stop after the hint sections. If you’re ready to see everything, scroll on.
Quick Snapshot: What You’re Solving on 24-August-2025
The New York Times Connections puzzle for August 24, 2025 (Puzzle #805) gives you 16 words that look like they showed up
to the party separately and swear they don’t know each other. Your job: organize them into four groups of four.
Each group shares a themesometimes straightforward (synonyms or categories), sometimes sneaky (wordplay or phrases),
and sometimes “I would like to speak with the manager of language.”
Hints for 24-August-2025 (Spoiler-Light)
Group-level hints (no category names yet)
- Group 1: Things you might use to hold (or serve) a drink.
- Group 2: Words that mean “split apart” or “torn.”
- Group 3: Slithery creaturesspecific types.
- Group 4: A word that can go in front of the same word to create familiar phrases.
Extra nudges (still spoiler-light)
- One group is very “kitchen cabinet meets dinner party.”
- One group is basically “what happened to my jeans after I tried to hop a fence.”
- One group is “nature documentary, but make it reptiles.”
- One group is “common phrase builder” (think: a blank + the same finishing word).
One-word nudges (mild spoilers)
If you want a single “anchor” word from each group to get moving, try these as starting points:
- Anchor word #1: GLASS
- Anchor word #2: TORN
- Anchor word #3: KING
- Anchor word #4: COLD
Answers for 24-August-2025 (Full Spoilers)
Last call before the spoilers: the full solutions are below. If you were trying to preserve your streak and your innocence, this is your exit ramp.
Yellow WINE VESSELS
- BOTTLE
- CARAFE
- DECANTER
- GLASS
Green RIPPED
- CLEFT
- RENT
- SPLIT
- TORN
Blue KINDS OF SNAKES
- CORAL
- GARTER
- KING
- RATTLE
Purple ____ CALL
- BOOTY
- CLOSE
- COLD
- CURTAIN
Why These Connections Work (And Why They Mess With You)
WINE VESSELS: BOTTLE, CARAFE, DECANTER, GLASS
This is the “thank you for being normal” category. You see DECANTER and CARAFE and your brain immediately
plays soft jazz and imagines someone saying “notes of cherry.” BOTTLE and GLASS complete the set.
The only real trap here is that GLASS has a million lives (material, window, mirror, hourglass vibes), so you might hesitate.
Don’t. On this grid, it’s for sipping.
RIPPED: CLEFT, RENT, SPLIT, TORN
This group is sneakier than it looks because one word is emotionally confusing: RENT.
Your brain may first interpret it as “money you pay to exist indoors.” But rent can also mean “torn”
(as in “rent asunder”), which is exactly what’s happening here. Pair that with TORN, SPLIT,
and CLEFT (divided), and you’ve got the “this cannot be fixed with tape” family.
Strategy note: when Connections gives you a word with a common everyday meaning (rent = payment),
always ask: “What’s the older or alternate meaning?” That’s how purple-level wordplay sneaks in early.
KINDS OF SNAKES: CORAL, GARTER, KING, RATTLE
Three of these might pop quickly if you’ve seen them in the wild or on a wildlife show. KING and CORAL
are classic snake names; GARTER is the friendly neighborhood snake that shows up in yards and causes dramatic shrieking;
RATTLE points to rattlesnake. The trap? Each word also has a non-snake identity:
coral is ocean stuff, garter is clothing, king is… well, kingly, and rattle is an action/noise.
Connections loves words with day jobs.
____ CALL: BOOTY, CLOSE, COLD, CURTAIN
This is the “phrase builder” group. Each word forms a common phrase when placed before CALL:
close call (barely avoided disaster), cold call (unsolicited pitch), curtain call (end-of-show bow),
and booty call (a slang term for a late-night request to meet up romantically/sexually).
The twist is that some of these feel like they belong in totally different worldstelemarketing, theater, near-miss moments, and slang
but Connections doesn’t care about your vibes. It cares about word structure.
The Grid’s Sneakiest Traps on This Date
Puzzle #805 is a good example of how Connections tempts you with “almost-groups.” Here are a few ways solvers often get baited:
- GLASS + CURTAIN can make you think “things on/near windows.” It’s not wrong in real lifejust wrong for this grid.
- RENT + BOTTLE can pull your brain toward “things you pay for.” Again: true in the economy, false in Connections.
- KING + CORAL might look like “royalty + ocean,” which is… not a category so much as a weird brunch theme.
- The word COLD is the ultimate double agent: it could be temperature, illness, personality, or (today) part of a phrase.
How to Solve Connections Faster Next Time
1) Hunt the “boring” group first
Most days, at least one category is straightforwardsynonyms or a common real-world category. If you can lock that in early,
you reduce the grid’s chaos and stop stepping on the same rakes over and over.
On 24-August-2025, “wine vessels” is that clean starting point for many players.
2) Treat every word like it has multiple passports
Words like GLASS, RENT, COLD, and CURTAIN are classic Connections troublemakers
because they belong to multiple contexts. Before you commit, quickly list two or three meanings/usages for each “polyglot” word.
If a word seems too useful, it’s probably the one being used in the least obvious way.
3) When you see a pattern, test it for “phrase logic”
Purple groups often rely on wordplay: prefixes/suffixes, homophones, letter changes, or “blank + word” constructions.
If four words look like they could all hook onto the same ending (like “____ CALL”), pause and check it.
Phrase groups can feel random until you spot the shared attachment point.
4) Use the “one-away” message wisely
“One away” is both helpful and emotionally suspicious. It means three of your four are correct, but it does not mean you should immediately
brute-force the fourth slot until your mistakes evaporate. Take note of the trio that seems strongest, then scan the remaining words for the best fit.
If nothing fits cleanly, leave it and solve another group first. Your future self will thank you.
5) Save a mistake for the endgame
Connections gives you limited room for experimentation. A smart approach is to be conservative earlyespecially on days
where words have lots of overlapping meanings. Once you’ve solved two groups, you can become bolder because the remaining words have fewer options.
Think of it like cooking: taste as you go, but don’t dump in the whole salt shaker on step one.
Mini Walkthrough: A Clean Solve Path for Puzzle #805
- Spot the drink containers: BOTTLE, CARAFE, DECANTER, GLASS.
- Look for strong synonym gravity: CLEFT, SPLIT, TORN… and remember RENT can mean torn.
- Snakes emerge: CORAL, GARTER, KING, RATTLE.
- Phrase-builder finish: BOOTY/CLOSE/COLD/CURTAIN + CALL.
of Real-World Connections Experience (Because This Game Is a Lifestyle Now)
Connections has a funny way of becoming part of your daily routine without ever asking permission. One day you’re casually tapping words while your toast
browns. Next thing you know, you’re negotiating with yourself like a hostage specialist: “Okay, if I solve yellow without mistakes, I’ll forgive myself
for yesterday’s purple catastrophe.”
Puzzle #805 (Aug 24, 2025) is a great snapshot of what Connections feels like in real life: confidence, confusion, then the sudden realization that
language is basically a prank. The “wine vessels” set is the moment you feel smart. It’s approachable, it’s tangible, it’s practically clinking glasses
at you. You lock it in and think, “This is my day. I am a word athlete.”
Then the game hands you RENT and laughs softly from behind a curtain.
That’s the thingConnections teaches you to respect alternate meanings. When you’re playing regularly, you start noticing them everywhere.
You hear someone say “close call” in a movie and your brain goes, “Phrase group. Purple energy.” You read “rent” in a book and think, “Do they mean
payment or ripped?” You spot a garter snake in the yard and feel weirdly proud, like you’ve unlocked bonus vocabulary DLC.
It also changes how you talk to other humans. People don’t ask “How are you?” anymore. They ask, “Did you get purple?” And if you did,
you act humble while secretly feeling like you should be awarded a tiny crown and a certificate that says Congratulations, You Recognize Patterns.
If you didn’t, you immediately form an opinion about the category and announce it with the confidence of someone delivering a verdict:
“That was not ‘easy.’ That was malicious.”
The most relatable part of #805 is how the grid tries to tempt you into making perfectly reasonable real-world groupings that don’t matter in puzzle-world.
GLASS and CURTAIN do hang out near windows. COLD and GLASS can both describe drinks. RENT and BOTTLE both relate to things you might pay for. But the puzzle
isn’t a mirror of real lifeit’s a logic box with one clean internal answer, and your job is to stop arguing with it and start learning its habits.
Over time, you build your own “Connections instincts.” You learn to scan for wordplay. You learn that one ordinary-looking word is often used in an
uncommon way. And you learn that when a category seems random, it’s usually because you haven’t found the shared hinge yetthe suffix, the phrase,
the letter pattern, the theme hiding in plain sight.
And honestly? Even on the days you lose, you still win a tiny moment of satisfaction: you wrestled with language, you noticed patterns,
and you gave your brain a quick workout before the rest of the day started throwing emails at your face. That’s not nothing. That’s a little daily
sparkplus a very healthy reason to dramatically whisper, “CURTAIN CALL,” when you finish.
Conclusion
The NYT Connections puzzle for 24-August-2025 (Puzzle #805) is a solid blend of the obvious and the sneaky:
a friendly “wine vessels” opener, a synonym set with a tricky word (“rent”), a clean snake category, and a phrase-based purple finish that rewards
anyone who thinks in collocations. If you solved it cleanly, congratsyour pattern-recognition powers are showing. If you didn’t, congrats anyway
you just added a few new mental shortcuts for the next grid.
