What 5-Letter Answers Solve The Sully Crossword Clue?

2025-10-31 17:50:59 248
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5 Answers

Logan
Logan
2025-11-01 01:07:17
Whenever I stare at a four- or five-letter slot for the clue 'sully', my brain immediately cycles through a handful of go-to verbs that constructors love. The top candidate for me is STAIN — it’s so common, fits cleanly in five letters, and carries that literal sense of leaving a mark. If the crossings look like TA or STA I start putting STAIN into the grid.

Another obvious fit is TAINT, which is slightly stingier in tone (a hint of moral contamination rather than a simple smudge). SMEAR is great when the clue could be taken as either a verb or a noun — it’s often clued in political or reputation contexts. SPOIL and DIRTY also pop up: SPOIL leans toward ruin or ruin the flavor, while DIRTY is blunt and flexible. I also keep an eye out for less common variants — BESET or BESMIRCH are longer and won’t fit five letters, but they remind me to check crossings carefully. Ultimately I pick based on intersecting letters and whether the puzzle wants a physical stain or a reputational blemish. For a quick game-night instinct, STAIN and TAINT are my immediate fills; SMEAR and SPOIL are trustworthy backups, and DIRTY is the wildcard that sneaks in sometimes. I like how even a simple four-letter clue opens up small shifts in meaning — keeps crosswords lively and slightly sneaky, which I enjoy.
Jack
Jack
2025-11-01 17:23:17
Got a 'sully' clue and five boxes to fill? I usually consider STAIN first because it's so straightforward and common in daily-language cluing. But I don't lock onto it until I check crosses; TAINT is my second pick if any crossing letter suggests a T in the second spot. SMEAR works nicely when the clue hints at reputation or smear campaigns, and SPOIL fits if the clue nudges toward ruin or damage rather than a physical mark.

Another frequent option is DIRTY — it's more of an adjective but often clued as a verb in casual puzzles. I also watch for thematic trickery: sometimes a puzzle wants a more figurative word, so TAINT or SMEAR become better fits. My little trick is to pencil the most common one in light pencil and then validate with crosses — saves time and avoids stubbornly committing to the wrong shade of 'sully'. End of the day, those five — STAIN, TAINT, SMEAR, SPOIL, DIRTY — cover almost everything I see in mainstream crosswords.
Faith
Faith
2025-11-01 23:00:36
Every time I'm racing through a daily puzzle I treat 'sully' as a mini-branch in my mental decision tree. First I scan the pattern: if it’s TAIN I flag TAINT; if it’s STN STAIN is locked. SMEAR jumps in when the clue could be figurative — think reputation or smear campaigns — and SPOIL appears when the nuance is more about ruin or decay, like spoiling food or spoiling plans. DIRTY is sort of the playground option: blunt, flexible, and sometimes exactly what the constructor wants.

I also consider part of speech and tone. A clue that feels clinical tends to favor STAIN; a nastier, moral-sounding clue gravitates toward TAINT or SMEAR. Sometimes crossing letters force an unexpected fit and I grin — there’s a certain joy in seeing how a single crossing vowel turns STAIN into STAID or TAINT into TALE (well, not a sully anymore, but you get the drift). For quick solving, I keep those five words in my head as the primary possibilities and let the crosses decide. It’s a small ritual that makes solving comfortably efficient and oddly satisfying.
Piper
Piper
2025-11-02 20:44:44
Lately I've treated 'sully' like a friendly little riddle with a short list of go-to fills. My top contenders are STAIN, TAINT, SMEAR, SPOIL, and DIRTY — each carries a slightly different flavor. STAIN is the everyday physical mark; TAINT suggests moral or reputational corruption; SMEAR can be both verb and noun in smear campaigns; SPOIL implies ruin; DIRTY is rough-and-ready and works when the clue is casual.

When I'm filling a grid I mentally test each against the crossings and the clue's tone. Sometimes the puzzle wants the literal smudge, sometimes the figurative blot on someone's name. I enjoy that tiny semantic dance — picking the right synonym feels like choosing the perfect brushstroke — and it usually feels great when the crosses confirm my pick.
Matthew
Matthew
2025-11-06 15:43:34
Puzzle nights taught me to treat 'sully' like a small vocabulary test. The five-letter verbs I reach for are STAIN, TAINT, SMEAR, SPOIL, and DIRTY. STAIN and SMEAR often stand in for physical marks or figurative smear campaigns, while TAINT carries that moral or reputational sting. SPOIL tends toward ruin — food or plans — and DIRTY is blunt and useful when the clue is casual. When I'm uncertain I compare crosses: a T in the middle often locks in TAINT, while ST--N makes STAIN almost inevitable. These options cover the usual suspects I see in weekday puzzles, and knowing their subtle differences helps me choose fast and with confidence.
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