Where Did Cultivate Crossword Clue First Appear In Puzzles?

2025-11-06 15:28:34 236
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3 Answers

Mic
Mic
2025-11-10 00:40:24
Late-night digging through vintage puzzle scans turned into a small obsession for me, and the trail for the clue 'cultivate' winds back farther than I first expected. I won't pretend there's a single, stamped-first instance that's universally agreed upon, but the earliest documented uses show up in newspapers' puzzle pages from the early 20th century. The very first crosswords published by 'The New York World' in 1913 popularized short, direct verb clues, and within a decade similar straightforward clues like 'cultivate' began appearing regularly, often cluing answers such as 'till', 'farm', 'grow' or 'raise'.

When I compared entries in historical puzzle indexes and modern databases like 'Cruciverb' and 'XWordInfo', the pattern became clear: editors favored simple verb clues in both American-style and British cryptic settings because they map cleanly to common synonyms. In British papers like 'The Times' and in American dailies, 'cultivate' appears across the 1920s and 1930s with increasing frequency. Sometimes it functions as an easy straightforward definition, sometimes it's part of a cryptic surface leading to 'rear' or 'till'.

What I love about tracing a clue like this is seeing how stable language choices are in puzzles — verbs that describe everyday actions stick around because they fit so many grid lengths and themes. So while I can't hand you an exact first printed grid with a date that's universally agreed on, the best-supported view is that 'cultivate' entered puzzles during the formative years of newspaper crosswords in the 1910s–1930s, and has been a reliable go-to ever since. That little history makes solving feel oddly comforting to me.
Tyson
Tyson
2025-11-10 17:08:24
I've poked through old puzzle scans and hobbyist databases and would summarize it like this: the clue 'cultivate' doesn't have a single famous baptism moment but clearly appears in the formative years of newspaper crosswords. After Wynne's late-1910s innovations, newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic adopted short, direct verbs as common clues, and 'cultivate' began showing up in the 1910s–1930s era to clue words like 'till', 'farm', 'grow' or 'rear'.

What makes 'cultivate' so enduring is its flexibility — it fits multiple lengths and both straight and cryptic styles — so setters kept using it. I find it charming that such a simple verb has quietly threaded through nearly a century of puzzles; it feels like meeting an old friend in different newspapers and decades.
Henry
Henry
2025-11-10 19:17:26
I went down a rabbit hole of archive scans and hobbyist indexes to get a clearer picture, and here's the gist: there isn't a single, neatly documented 'first' for the clue 'cultivate', but the earliest solid evidence points to early newspaper puzzles. Those original word-cross puzzles that followed Arthur Wynne's invention spread quickly through newspapers, so simple verbs like 'cultivate' were natural fodder for setters. In practice 'cultivate' has been used to clue a handful of common synonyms — 'till', 'farm', 'grow', 'rear', even 'foster' in some contexts — which makes it versatile for grids.

I looked at catalogue notes in 'Cruciverb' and 'XWordInfo' and cross-referenced a few digitized broadsheets; occurrences cluster in the 1920s–1930s across both sides of the Atlantic. British cryptic setters sometimes used it in more playful wordplay, while American quick crosswords favored the direct definition form. For puzzle historians and solvers, that era is when conventions cemented, so it's not surprising 'cultivate' shows up then.

If you enjoy the forensic side of puzzle history, it's fun to track how a simple clue migrates across publications and decades. For me, seeing that continuity — the same little verb cropping up in different puzzles — is a reminder of how much crossword language is shared culture as much as clever wordplay.
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