Our NYT Crossword Hints for November 10, 2024 puzzle will help you move through the grid if you’ve found yourself stuck on a clue. The NYT Crossword is a daily crossword that tests solvers’ knowledge and vocabulary. It’s one of the most popular crosswords in the world, known for its challenging clues and clever wordplay. The puzzle is published in the print edition of the paper and is also available online.
NYT Crossword Hints, November 10, 2024
You’ll find hints for all of the crossword clues for the NYT Crossword on 11/10/24. The clues are listed below, and you can click/tap on a clue to go to its page for more detail, including definitions, but if you don’t want to be immediately spoiled, you can reveal letter by letter to still offer yourself more of a challenge before revealing the full solution.
- 1A. Like issues covered by The Advocate magazine
- 5A. Guide
- 10A. Display along the inside of a subway car
- 15A. Building access device
- 18A. Poe-esque
- 20A. Aid for an early-morning flight, maybe
- 21A. Response to stunning news
- 22A. "Wild" card game
- 23A. Six-inch or footlong?
- 25A. Who might tearfully wonder "Were we just not meant to be …"?
- 27A. Made it through Econ 101?
- 29A. Crate & Barrel competitor
- 30A. “Give ___!” (“Try!”)
- 31A. Museo display
- 32A. Big name in big home appliances
- 34A. Bad sort of roommate
- 36A. Sharp turn
- 37A. One who's always springing for things, for short?
- 38A. Stirrup's place
- 39A. It's attached to covers and sheets
- 40A. Groundhog of renown
- 42A. Buy-in the round before going all in?
- 49A. Kitten's cry
- 51A. Skin care product
- 52A. Rum, in Spanish
- 53A. Ho-hum reactions
- 54A. Top-notch
- 57A. ___ de Lesseps of the "Real Housewives" franchise
- 58A. Took down
- 60A. Meriting an R rating, maybe
- 61A. Figure that's roughly six times less on the moon
- 63A. ___ Play (hit video game)
- 64A. Concession opposite 71-Down
- 68A. Vessel for cooking jollof rice or injera bread?
- 70A. "Next time, try reading the clue!" or "Stick to sudoku!"?
- 72A. Transcript creator
- 73A. French direction
- 74A. Yellow-green soft drink, per the stylization on its packaging
- 75A. Frolic
- 76A. Daytime annoyance while watching TV
- 78A. Jay-Z's "Magna ___ Holy Grail"
- 79A. Annual river thawing
- 81A. Avian rhyme of "hawk"
- 84A. N.Y.C.-based sports channel
- 85A. Tiny pieces
- 86A. Agcy. overseeing reactors
- 87A. Something in a doomscroller's feed?
- 91A. Didn't mean to do that!
- 94A. City on the Nile
- 95A. Hardy follower
- 96A. Shift units: Abbr.
- 98A. Features of two Super Bowls, for short
- 100A. Asia's so-called "___ countries"
- 101A. "Sure thing, dear"
- 105A. God who fathered a queen of the Amazons
- 106A. ___ smear
- 107A. Caption describing an online photo that can't be seen
- 109A. The engine, the steering wheel, the catalytic converter, all of it?
- 112A. Eye doctor
- 114A. Someone shouting that maybe YOU try fixing your apartment?
- 115A. Peeve
- 116A. Oktoberfest glass
- 117A. Sports page offering
- 118A. Dimples or freckles, e.g.
- 119A. Last of five rhyming Greek letters
- 120A. Benefits
- 121A. Angrily leave, with "out"
- 122A. Mailing info, informally
- 1D. Musical nickname since the 1980s
- 2D. What servers and sleuths each hope to do
- 3D. Kenneth of "Oppenheimer"
- 4D. Turner backed by the Ikettes
- 5D. Car roof option
- 6D. Person I used to be
- 7D. Response to "You were snoring all night again"
- 8D. Moving day need
- 9D. Blended hair coloring effect
- 10D. Soak up
- 11D. Dance move requiring upper body and core strength
- 12D. Dog park figure
- 13D. Clique
- 14D. Loretta who played "Hot Lips" Houlihan
- 15D. Connection to a carburetor
- 16D. Length of William Henry Harrison's presidency
- 17D. Diner's request at the end of a meal
- 19D. Masters of the written word?
- 24D. Engineering discipline, casually
- 26D. Italian scooter brand
- 28D. Elevator load limit, often
- 33D. Not supporting, perhaps
- 35D. "Save the ___" (modern conservation slogan)
- 39D. Submitted
- 41D. "OMG ... that's hysterical!"
- 43D. Each planet's orbit is one
- 44D. Milky Way component
- 45D. Park City resident
- 46D. Pocket detritus
- 47D. Get there
- 48D. Word with true or soon
- 50D. East Coast convenience store chain
- 54D. Opposite of maigre
- 55D. Flat floater
- 56D. Unit once defined as the area a team of oxen could plow in one day
- 58D. Equus africanus, for one
- 59D. Young disciple of an old Titian
- 62D. Pep
- 63D. Is inadequate
- 65D. Target of a certain "Eater"
- 66D. Liu of "Barbie"
- 67D. Thunder shower?
- 69D. ___ Domingo, Best Actor nominee for 2023's "Rustin"
- 70D. Throat malady
- 71D. Gloat opposite 64-Across
- 74D. Artist Chagall
- 77D. In which letters are spelled with digits, for short
- 78D. Former French president Jacques
- 80D. Mad to the max
- 81D. Four for a TI-84, for short
- 82D. Above the strike zone, to a baseball announcer
- 83D. Brando's role in "A Streetcar Named Desire"
- 85D. Sharp pain
- 88D. Pretty please?
- 89D. Alternative to litmus paper
- 90D. When many school days end
- 92D. One might jump out of a window
- 93D. Driver's license, e.g
- 97D. No longer on duty: Abbr.
- 99D. Like convertibles
- 101D. Broadway gossip
- 102D. Force out
- 103D. Famous family in atomic theory
- 104D. "Nice to ___ you!" (online salutation)
- 105D. Backdrop for a memorable kiss
- 108D. Nonsense, to Brits
- 110D. Nickname for Francisco
- 111D. Mystique
- 112D. One getting a pass, for short
- 113D. Carry-___ (some luggage)
We also recommend trying your hand at the NYT Mini Crossword, which is definitely easier (on all days!) as it is a 5×5, compared to the full-sized crossword (which is 15×15, and the Sunday edition is 21×21!). New crosswords are released at 10PM ET on weekdays and 6PM ET on weekends.
The New York Times crossword was first published in The New York Times in 1942 and has been a daily feature ever since. It is known for its high level of difficulty and for its clever, often playful, clues and themes. The puzzles range in size from 15x15 grids on weekdays to larger 21x21 grids on Sundays, with varying levels of difficulty.

The New York Times crossword is created by a team of skilled puzzle constructors and editors, who work to ensure that each puzzle is both entertaining and challenging for solvers. The puzzles are often themed, with clues and answers related to a particular subject or concept, and they frequently feature wordplay and puns.

Solving the New York Times crossword has become a beloved pastime for many, and there are even competitions and clubs devoted to crossword puzzle solving. The New York Times crossword is available in print in the newspaper and online, and it has a dedicated following of loyal solvers who eagerly await each day's puzzle.
If you’re still struggling to solve your NYT crosswords, consider practicing with the Eugene Sheffer and Thomas Joseph dailies first. If you’re looking for similarly challenging crosswords, we recommend the WSJ Crossword and LA Times Crossword.
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