Where Can I Find Examples Of Decay Crossword Clue Answers?

2025-11-07 17:31:30 242
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3 Answers

Quinn
Quinn
2025-11-12 20:40:11
For a slightly more methodical route, I go to a mix of printed anthologies and searchable digital lists. Pulling out a compendium like the 'New York Times' puzzle books or browsing the 'LA Times' archives online will give you clean examples of straightforward clues where 'decay' equals short fills such as 'rot' or 'spoil', alongside longer phrasal fills like 'go bad' or 'fall into disrepair'. Use site-specific Google searches too: put the clue word in quotes and add site:cruciverb.com or site:xwordinfo.com to limit results to puzzle archives.

If you want to see how decay shows up differently in American vs British puzzles, check 'The Guardian' for cryptic treatments — you'll find hidden words and clever wordplay where the surface reads like something about food or time but the cryptic parse gives you 'moulder' or 'putrefy'. For chemical or physical senses, look for clues with indicators like 'oxidize' or 'eat away', which often lead to 'corrode' or 'erode'. I like this approach because it trains you to spot setter patterns and gives a nice cross-section of literal, figurative, and cryptic uses of the same semantic field.
Cadence
Cadence
2025-11-13 11:51:41
If you're after a quick, hands-on hit, start with a pattern search engine and a thesaurus. Plug in ? ? ? for three-letter fills and search for clue text containing 'decay' — you'll rapidly confirm that 'rot' is the most common fill, but then expand to 4–8 letter options like 'spoil', 'molder'/'moulder', 'corrode', 'decompose', and 'putrefy'. Alongside that, bookmark a couple of solver sites such as 'OneAcross' or 'Anagrammer' which reveal past uses and collated clue types.

Another fun trick is to scan puzzle blogs like 'Wordplay' where constructors sometimes explain their clues; they’ll say whether they used 'decay' as a straight definition, as a surface for a cryptic, or as part of a pun. From there I make a little swipe file of examples — a folder with literal fills, cryptic constructions, and idiomatic phrases — and it becomes a handy reference when I’m stuck on a grid. It’s oddly satisfying to see how one simple concept gets dressed up in so many inventive ways; keeps the hobby fresh for me.
Finn
Finn
2025-11-13 16:31:02
I've hunted down tons of clue banks and pattern-search tools over the years, and if you want concrete examples of decay clues and their typical fills, start with the big crossword archives. Sites like 'XWord Info' and 'Crossword nexus' let you search by clue word or by pattern length, and 'Cruciverb' has a massive database of published clues that setters and fans consult. Type "decay" into those search bars and you’ll see every published clue that used that word, plus the fills that matched.

For more casual digging, try community places: 'Reddit' has threads where people collect clever cluing for common roots, and 'Crossword Tracker' aggregates clue-occurrences across many outlets. If you're after cryptic-style rot/decay clues, browse 'The Guardian' archives or British setter blogs — they love wordplay and will show you indirect definitions, anagrams, and hidden-word clues that lead to 'rot', 'molder', 'putrefy', 'corrode', etc. Dictionaries and thesauruses (online or old-school) are also surprisingly helpful when you want every shade of meaning a setter might exploit; pair a thesaurus lookup with a pattern search on one of the databases and you’ll turn up concrete published fills in minutes. I enjoy how varied the same basic concept becomes when you read through a few hundred entries — it's like watching language rust and bloom at once.
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