The NYT Connections puzzle #1008 for March 15, 2026 brings together possessive verbs, mechanical parts, blended English words, and a final category built around a familiar phrase pattern. At first glance, several entries feel like they could belong in more than one group, which is exactly what makes this board a little trickier than it first appears. The yellow set is the most approachable, but the purple connection asks players to step back and think about how words combine rather than what they mean on their own.
You can play the official puzzle on the New York Times Connections page. If you want a nudge before seeing the full solution, the hints, categories, and practice grid below will help you work through today’s board.


Hints and Category Explanations
🟨 Yellow – Taking something for yourself
Start with the group built around selfish control. These words all suggest grabbing, dominating, or keeping something in a way that leaves little room for anyone else. If one term feels especially slangy, that is part of the misdirection, but the shared idea is still possession and control.
🟩 Green – Mechanical parts with teeth
This set belongs in the world of machinery. Think about circular components that interlock, rotate, and help transfer motion. If you picture a bike, a clock, or the inside of an engine, you are moving in the right direction.
🟦 Blue – English words created by blending two others
This category turns from definitions to word formation. Each answer is a portmanteau, meaning it is formed by merging pieces of two separate words into one. Once you identify one obvious example, the rest of the group starts to fall into place.
🟪 Purple – Words that complete a common phrase with “bull”
The toughest set is not about direct meaning so much as pattern recognition. These words pair with the same word placed before them to create familiar compound words. If you are trying to solve the board by saying combinations aloud, this final connection becomes much easier to hear.
Categories
Yellow: Greedily Control
Green: Toothed Wheels
Blue: Portmanteaux
Purple: Bull ____
One-word anchors
- 🟨 Yellow: HOG
- 🟩 Green: GEAR
- 🟦 Blue: SMOG
- 🟪 Purple: HORN
Practice Mode
Answers
🟨 Yellow – Greedily Control
BOGART, CORNER, HOG, MONOPOLIZE
This group is tied together by the idea of taking too much or controlling something selfishly. Whether it is cornering a market, hogging attention, or monopolizing a conversation, every word points to keeping something for yourself.
🟩 Green – Toothed Wheels
COG, GEAR, PINION, SPROCKET
All four are mechanical components associated with rotational movement. Some are broader everyday terms, while others are more technical, but they all fit within the same family of toothed wheel parts used in machines and systems.
🟦 Blue – Portmanteaux
BLOG, MOTEL, SMOG, SPORK
Each of these is formed by blending two words together. Blog comes from “web log,” motel from “motor hotel,” smog from “smoke” and “fog,” and spork from “spoon” and “fork.” It is a classic Connections category that rewards noticing structure more than theme.
🟪 Purple – Bull ____
DOG, DOZE, FROG, HORN
This final set works only when the words are paired with bull: bulldog, bulldoze, bullfrog, and bullhorn. It is the sort of category that can stay invisible until one pairing clicks, and then the rest suddenly makes sense.
About Today’s Puzzle
Today’s board feels tricky because it mixes direct categories with word-construction categories. The green group can be solved through subject knowledge, and the yellow set is driven by meaning, but the blue and purple groups depend more on language patterns. That shift in logic is often what slows players down in Connections, especially when a word seems plausible in more than one direction.
Players who like to track their performance can also review their results through the game’s stats tools after finishing the puzzle. For many regular solvers, Connections now sits alongside Wordle, Strands, the Mini Crossword, and Sports Edition as part of a daily puzzle routine.
If you enjoy solving daily puzzle categories and want to compare patterns from the previous day, you may also like NYT Connections hints and answers for March 14, 2026.
















