

Connections, the New York Times daily game, asks readers to link words based on their relationships. The puzzle for January 6 features intriguing categories for linguistic and logical skill testing. The hints and solutions to help with today’s puzzle and keep the streak alive are below.
A grid of 16 words is presented as connections. The one you are trying to do is to put the words into four groups of four, based on the links they share. These links could be part of a category like Objects, Actions, or Wordplay.
Each group is color-coded:
Yellow is normally easy.
Intermediate reasoning is needed for Green and Blue.
Purple is often clever wordplay or something abstract.
For each group, players have to submit four words. There are only four mistakes per game. It helps to observe the patterns or even to shuffle the grid to try and figure out the correct combinations. Once solved, connection players can share their results or revisit previous puzzles in the Connection archive.
Today’s grid includes the following 16 words: BOOT, BREEZE, RUM, PICNIC, PANT, UMBRELLA, PIE, HEAVE, ARS, ABC, GENERAL, BROAD, GASP, BUT, PUFF
Hints for the categories are:
Yellow Group: Wheeze or become winded.
Green Group: It means overall picture.
Blue Group: Easy or simple synonyms.
Purple Group: Synonyms for rear ends, minus the last letter, smaller seats.
Spoilers ahead! Below are the answers:
Yellow Group — Breathe Hard: GASP, HEAVE, PANT, PUFF
Green Group — Catchall Terms: UMBRELLA, GENERAL, BROAD, BLANKET
Blue Group — Easy Things: ABC, BREEZE, PICNIC, PIE
Purple Group — Synonyms for Rear Ends Minus Last Letter: ARS, BOOT, BUT, RUM
Breathe Hard (Yellow Group)
They mean physical effort or heavy breathing. Shortness of breath is denoted by the terms ‘GASP’, and ‘PANT’; labored breathing is signified by ‘HEAVE’, and ‘PUFF’.
Catchall Terms (Green Group)
“‘BLANKET’ and ‘UMBRELLA’ describing overriding categories.” “BROAD” and “GENERAL” also reinforce inclusivity or a lack of specificity.
Easy Things (Blue Group)
This group represents metaphors of simplicity. Expressions like easy as “ABC” or easy as “pie” are universally understood. ‘BREEZE’ and ‘PICNIC’ also mean the effortless.
Rear Ends Less LastLetter (Purple Group): Synonyms
Puzzle’s wordplay challenge is here. “ARSE” stands for “ARS” and “BOOT” is the abbreviation for “BOOTY.” In the same vein, BUM and BUTTON come from BUTT and RUMP, as do BUMS and BUTTOMS, FUM and FUMBLES, and FULLUMS and FULLMOONS.
Look for Obvious Groups: These are words that hint at familiar sayings like “ABC” or “PIE”. Start with terms that catch the eye.
Shuffle the Grid: The words can be rearranged to discover some hidden connections.
Consider Wordplay: Purple groups usually feature puns, abbreviations, or misspelt words.
Take Your Time: With patience, patterns form. Before submitting guesses, analyze the grid carefully.
The January 6 Connections puzzle is a logical reasoning and linguistic creativity problem. Today’s challenge provides an engaging mental workout from (often) simple word-finding exercises like identifying synonyms to word-play decipherment. Time for sharpening those puzzle-solving skills and get ready for tomorrow’s grid! Staying with the daily word game phenomenon and enjoy more of its growing archive. Happy puzzling!