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Today's NYT Connections Hints (and Answer) for Saturday, February 10, 2024

Here are some hints to help you win NYT Connections #244.
Connections art
Credit: Ian Moore

If you’re looking for the Connections answer for Saturday, February 10, 2024, read on—I’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solutions to all four categories. Along the way, I’ll explain the meanings of the trickier words and we’ll learn how everything fits together. Beware, there are spoilers below for February 10, NYT Connections #244! Read on if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Connections game. 

If you want an easy way to come back to our Connections hints every day, bookmark this page. You can also find our past hints there as well, in case you want to know what you missed in a previous puzzle.

Below, I’ll give you some oblique hints at today’s Connections answers. And farther down the page, I’ll reveal the themes and the answers. Scroll slowly and take just the hints you need!

NYT Connections board for February 10, 2024: PACK, RAT, DRAGON, MOUNTAIN, CAT, BUTTER, HORSE, JAM, CANARY, COW, STUFF, TRIANGLE, SQUEEZE, SNITCH, FIRE, FINK.
Credit: Connections/NYT

Hints for the themes in today’s Connections puzzle

Here are some spoiler-free hints for the groupings in today’s Connections:

  • Yellow category - These will squeal.

  • Green category - How you get everything into your suitcase.

  • Blue category - You’ll want to attack this category like a warrior (iii).

  • Purple category - What do you call one of these with no wings? A walk!


BEWARE: Spoilers follow for today’s Connections puzzle!

We’re about to give away some of the answers. Scroll slowly if you don’t want the whole thing spoiled. (The full solution is a bit further down.)

A heads up about the tricky parts

RAT and PACK do not go together, but RAT and FINK do. And if you’re looking at all the animals today, they’re split up among multiple categories. There is one category where the members are all living things, but it’s a fill-in-the-blank rather than a straightforward grouping. 

What are the categories in today’s Connections?

  • Yellow: STOOL PIGEON

  • Green: CRAM INTO A TIGHT SPACE

  • Blue: YOGA POSES

  • Purple: ____ FLY

DOUBLE BEWARE: THE SOLUTION IS BELOW

Ready to learn the answers to today’s Connections puzzle? I give them all away below.

What are the yellow words in today’s Connections?

The yellow grouping is considered to be the most straightforward. The theme for today’s yellow group is STOOL PIGEON and the words are: CANARY, FINK, RAT, SNITCH.

What are the green words in today’s Connections?

The green grouping is supposed to be the second-easiest. The theme for today’s green category is CRAM INTO A TIGHT SPACE and the words are: JAM, PACK, SQUEEZE, STUFF.

What are the blue words in today’s Connections?

The blue grouping is the second-hardest. The theme for today’s blue category is YOGA POSES and the words are: CAT, COW, MOUNTAIN, TRIANGLE.

What are the purple words in today’s Connections?

The purple grouping is considered to be the hardest. The theme for today’s purple category is ____ FLY and the words are: BUTTER, DRAGON, FIRE, HORSE.

How I solved today’s Connections

I’m not going to put RAT with FINK, that’s a trap…oh, wait, SNITCH is in here too. And CANARY. That’s a group!

JAM and STUFF give me another clear group. 

But I’m stuck on the last eight. I try CAT, COW, HORSE, and DRAGON just because they are all animals. No dice. Then I realize CAT and COW are also yoga poses. So is TRIANGLE, and, yep, MOUNTAIN!

What’s left? It has to be a fill-in-the-blank. Peanut BUTTER, peanut DRAGON? Bread and BUTTER, bread and DRAGON? Aha! BUTTERfly and DRAGONfly. 

If I may be pedantic for a minute (it’s my column, so I may): When an insect is a type of fly, the name is two words: house fly, horse fly, bot fly. When an insect is not a member of the order Diptera, i.e. not an actual fly, the name is one word: butterfly, dragonfly, firefly. Fireflies, for example, are actually beetles. 

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Puzzle #244
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How to play Connections

I have a full guide to playing Connections, but here’s a refresher on the rules:

First, find the Connections game either on the New York Times website or in their Crossword app. You’ll see a game board with 16 tiles, each with one word or phrase. Your job is to select a group of four tiles that have something in common. Often they are all the same type of thing (for example: RAIN, SLEET, HAIL, and SNOW are all types of wet weather) but sometimes there is wordplay involved (for example, BUCKET, GUEST, TOP TEN, and WISH are all types of lists: bucket list, guest list, and so on).

Select four items and hit the Submit button. If you guessed correctly, the category and color will be revealed. (Yellow is easiest, followed by green, then blue, then purple.) If your guess was incorrect, you’ll get a chance to try again.

You win when you’ve correctly identified all four groups. But if you make four mistakes before you finish, the game ends and the answers are revealed.

How to win Connections

The most important thing to know to win Connections is that the groupings are designed to be tricky. Expect to see overlapping groups. For example, one puzzle seemed to include six breakfast foods: BACON, EGG, PANCAKE, OMELET, WAFFLE, and CEREAL. But BACON turned out to be part of a group of painters along with CLOSE, MUNCH, and WHISTLER, and EGG was in a group of things that come by the dozen (along with JUROR, ROSE, and MONTH). So don’t hit “submit” until you’ve confirmed that your group of four contains only those four things.

If you’re stuck, another strategy is to look at the words that seem to have no connection to the others. If all that comes to mind when you see WHISTLER is the painting nicknamed “Whistler’s Mother,” you might be on to something. When I solved that one, I ended up googling whether there was a painter named Close, because Close didn’t fit any of the obvious themes, either.

Another way to win when you’re stuck is, obviously, to read a few helpful hints–which is why we share these pointers every day. Check back tomorrow for the next puzzle!