Letter Boxed July 02, 2024 Answers

Here are the Letter Boxed July 02, 2024 Answers from New York Times Games. Our solutions and answers are 100% valid and accurate. We suggest trying to solve the game on your own before using the help of our website.

Sides of this Letter Box are:

YGTXUNOAQRSB

The answers are:

QUAYSSTRONGBOX

49 thoughts on “Letter Boxed July 02, 2024 Answers”

        1. Yep …
          and it took me way too long to find it … a stealthy 5+9=14/2 solution.
          Especially when the first word is short i have a hard time …

      1. OA, which I’m assuming will also stand for Only Answer today. But took quite awhile to stumble on Strongbox. Had tried to incorporate BOX into a bunch of other words unsuccessfully. Happy to be done with it.

          1. Radioactive Flower

            Hey, MVUAhhh…

            The closest I got to enjoy it is through my very naughty nephew. They were in town last week. He always find ways to make you angry. But, I love him still. Being the only grandchild of my parents, he’s spoiled. ❤️💜
            🤗🥰🤗🥰

      1. Radioactive Flower

        Hey, STEPHFIE,

        🎉🥳WOW! BINGO!!! You got it! Yay!!!🥳🎉

        VOLUNTEER, indeed! 🤓🤗😉

        Double thumbs up!!! 👍👍
        ☢️🌹

      2. That’s awesome 👏!
        much better than:
        arguments
        befuddled
        bogusness
        casuality (sp?)
        casualtys (sp?)
        etc.
        etc.
        👏😎🇺🇸

          1. That’s what I got, but there may be other solves. I also saw FAMILY, SIMPLY, SIMPLICITY, LIBRARY. etc.

          1. Radioactive Flower

            Hey, Sir BILL DUFFIN, Mr. DAREDAVEL, Mr. McBEE 🐝,

            Congratulations! You all got the OA. Good job! 🤓👍

            ABSTRACTS – SIMPLIFY, indeed. 🤓👍
            ☢️🌹

      1. Radioactive Flower

        Hey, OSCAROO,

        I’m glad you found an alternate solution. Good job too! 🤓👍
        ☢️🌹

  1. QUAYS — STRONGBOX

    Found STRONGBOX and then guessed using the remaining letters and QUAY was accepted (had never heard of it before).

    1. I really wanted to use ORANGUTANS but the leftovers (bqxy) were really impossible to do much with.

  2. A sleepy OA at 2:00am. Hard to get much traction with this one. Like Bill Duffin it was easy to solve after finally putting STRONG and BOX together. But I have known the word QUAYS since I was young: I consistently mispronounced it as “kways” while reading out loud a humorous short story called “How to Yot”, which my family first assumed was a joke in the story until they finally corrected me.

    1. Huh.
      You know, i would have always pronounced quay as “kway” if i ever had to, but us country boys just keep it simple and say “dock”.
      In Florida we have “keys”; while the Bahamas have “cays” – lots of them!
      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_islands_of_the_Bahamas&diffonly=true
      Ever since diving with Chubby Winner in the 70s i knew “cay” was pronounced “key”.

      But i didn’t know about “quay” until today.
      Ms. Osmond the Grammarist straightened me out with the “key” differences of these three:
      https://grammarist.com/homophones/cay-quay-and-key/

      I do have a request:
      Everyone please go to the OED and listen to their British English pronunciation versus US English pronunciation – i really think they’ve got them reversed!
      https://www.oed.com/dictionary/quay_n?tl=true

      😎

  3. The shortest time I spent for today’s puzzle. I remember that STRONGBOX had appeared before, so I solved it very quickly.

    1. Bernie Horowitz

      OA, Quays Strongbox. Possibly a factor in yesterday’s Chandler Retribute, and probably a one-off, after several days of very busy arrays. Indeed, Strongbox is a fairly recent repeat, making it easier to spot.

  4. QUANGOS-STORYBOX… was not accepted. Don’t know what a strongbox is – just a strong box? 🤔 (To be fair, I’m not sure what a STORYBOX is, either.) Sad to have to let go of SYNTAX. Also tried SUB-, TRANS-, GASTRO- words. Never mind.

  5. Another quick OA. The only thing I can find that would prevent it from being a unique solution is that the OED lists QUYAT as an archaic variant spelling of QUIET and indicates that it can be a noun (but provides no historical example of that). So that would license QUYATS if you play with a very loose interpretation of the OED word list (but not Scrabble).

    Apparently QUYA is the Quechua word for queen. If we’re going to allow mixing languages, all kinds of possibilities open up!

  6. Failed today. Found this one quite frustrating. Never thought of STRONGBOX even though I’ve used it in Letterboxed before. I actually Googled a list of dinosaur names but Letterboxed didn’t accept any of them.
    I prefer the less limiting letter arrays.

    My 3: GRANTS SQUAB BOXY.

    Only other words I found were: TAXON, AXON/S, OUTBOX, QUAG/S, SAXONY, STATUSQUO (I was surprised this was one word) and ONYX.

    1. I thought about STATUS QUO but I didn’t even try it as I always thought of it as two words as well. I have vivid memories of attending several Status Quo concerts back in the early 70s. That term will always have that meaning for me! 🙂

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