NYT Connections Hints & Answers: January 4 (#938)

by Priyanka Patel

Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Today’s New York Times game features a playful, if slightly cheeky, theme! Read on for clues and today’s Connections answers.


Today’s Connections puzzle includes a category centered around, well, butts! The purple grouping is particularly unusual. Let’s dive into the clues and solutions.

Players registered with the Times Games section can now track their progress, including puzzles completed, win rate, perfect scores, and win streaks. A Connections Bot, similar to the one for Wordle, is also available to analyze your answers and provide a numeric score.

Hints for Today’s Connections Groups

Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the most challenging purple group.

Yellow group hint: Think newsprint.

Green group hint: It goes around and around.

Blue group hint: What defenders do on the gridiron.

Purple group hint: A different word for posterior.

Answers for Today’s Connections Groups

Yellow group: copy, edition, issue, print.

Green group: coil, crank, reel, wind.

Blue group: blitz, block, sack, tackle.

Purple group: drear (rear), etail (tail), grump (rump), scan (can).

completed NYT Connections puzzle for Jan. 4, 2026.

The completed Connections puzzle for January 4, 2026.


Screenshot

The Yellow Words in Today’s Connections

The theme is paper publication. The four answers are copy, edition, issue and print.

The Green Words in Today’s Connections

The theme is spool. The four answers are coil, crank, reel and wind.

The Blue Words in Today’s Connections

The theme is things a defensive football player does. The four answers are blitz, block, sack and tackle.

The Purple Words in Today’s Connections

The theme is synonyms for butt plus starting letter. The four answers are drear (rear), etail (tail), grump (rump) and scan (can).


Toughest Connections Puzzles

Some Connections puzzles have proven particularly challenging for players. Recognizing patterns from past puzzles might help with future ones.

#5: Included “things you can set,” such as mood, record, table and volleyball.

#4: Included “one in a dozen,” such as egg, juror, month and rose.

#3: Included “streets on screen,” such as Elm, Fear, Jump and Sesame.

#2: Included “power ___” such as nap, plant, Ranger and trip.

#1: Included “things that can run,” such as candidate, faucet, mascara and nose.

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