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Stuck on the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands puzzle? Here are progressive hints and the full answer for the “Won't you be my neighbor?” puzzle (Strands #192 of 509 in our archive). Every reveal is hidden by default — click to open the ones you need.
The theme for the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands puzzle is “Won't you be my neighbor?”. Every theme word and the spangram connects back to this phrase, so think about what related words might fit a 6×8 grid of 48 letters before you start scanning.
The spangram for the “Won't you be my neighbor?” puzzle is 9 letters long and starts with the letter C. It touches two opposite edges of the grid, as every NYT Strands spangram does.
Besides the spangram, the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands puzzle has 5 theme words. Together with the spangram, they use every letter on the 6×8 grid exactly once.
The spangram for the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands “Won't you be my neighbor?” puzzle is COMMUNITY. It spans two opposite edges of the 6×8 grid and captures the theme directly.
Here are the 5 theme words for the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands “Won't you be my neighbor?” puzzle:
Plus the spangram COMMUNITY, that’s every word on the grid — all 48 letters accounted for.
Answers for the July 14, 2025 NYT Strands puzzle. Strands Unlimited is an independent fan archive — today's NYT Strands is free on nytimes.com/games/strands.
This puzzle's theme, "Won't you be my neighbor?", is phrased as a question — and every word hidden in the grid helps answer it. Question-themed Strands puzzles reward players who pause to brainstorm possible answers before diving into the letter grid. The spangram will likely spell out the answer directly, with the theme words serving as supporting evidence. Think about what home & family concepts might fit.
This puzzle has 5 theme words hidden in the grid — a balanced count that gives you enough to work with without overwhelming the board. With 9 letters, the spangram is mid-length — long enough to stand out in the grid but still requiring careful scanning to trace from edge to edge. Originally published on a Monday, As puzzle #192 of 509+, this one comes from the middle of the Strands collection, when the puzzle makers had hit their stride.