Here there are Letter Boxed June 15, 2022 Answers from New York Times Games. Our solutions and answers are 100% valid and accurate. We suggest to try and solve the game by your own before using the help of our website.
Sides of this Letter Box are:
EPMHIRCLGOUA
The answers are:
CHOREOGRAPHHELIUM
MORPHOLOGICAL – LURE
Also 17 / 2
pharmocologic / cue
Oops. Pharmacologic / cue
Same here, Pharmacologic – Cue. At 16/2 it’s better than the official answer, but I’m sure someone will be able to improve on it. This looks like a promising array.
MICROGRAPH – HURLER also 16/2
MORPHOLOGICAL — LIEU/LUGE/LURE
Morphological / lieu
Plum Microphage
Same. Rushed over here to find out I should have tried lum. I looked up lum in an online dictionary. Says: “Scot a chimney.” No closer to understanding the word.
I wasn’t sure on LUM either, but after I knew the game would accept it, I researched it and came across references to LUM being a light source..
‘Lum’ is Scottish vernacular for ‘chimney’.
Used ALUM
MUCH – HELIOGRAPH 14/2
MUCILAGE – ECHOGRAPH
Ileum – micrograph
LUM – MICROPHAGE 13/2
Heliograph/humic
couple of 15/2 … MICROGRAPH-HELIUM or HELIUM-MACROPHAGE
ALUM MICROPHAGE for me.
MAGILP — PUCHERO 13/2
I think this one takes the prize for obscurity, anyway!
ooh well done. Looking up puchero has made me hungry.
I got 13/2 with LUM – MICROPHAGE
Went for the 14/3
CALIPH – HUMOR – REG
LUM – MICROPHAGE 2/13
LUM = a chimney
MICROPHAGE = a small phagocytic blood cell
Puma-Archaeological
Mulie – echograph
Graphological – lumiere
I had no idea that the solutions were always just two words, till I lurked for a while here, for a few days. Amazing how once you see how things work, it possible to follow suit.
Is there a common methodology for solving Letterboxed, or just simple trial and error? Research is allowed AFTER? or before submitting words? Or it doesn’t matter?
THANKS
Pharmacological lure
Graphological – lumiere
I had no idea that the solutions were always just two words, till I lurked for a while here, for a few days. Amazing how once you see how things work, it possible to follow suit.
Is there a common methodology for solving Letterboxed, or just simple trial and error? Research is allowed AFTER? or before submitting words? Or it doesn’t matter?