This hive centers on N and surrounds it with a tight, consonant-forward set — great territory for short anchors and a handful of longer verb forms. Treat it like a build-from-the-core puzzle: lock in a few dependable 4-letter N-words, then try adding letters or switching to -ed/-ing/-s variants (where allowed) to reach the bigger finds.

About today’s puzzle

As always, the rules are simple: every word must include the center letter T and be at least four letters long. You can reuse letters as much as you like — which was definitely useful for today’s longer finds. This grid rewarded both careful planning and creative wordplay.

NYT Spelling Bee Answers: 3 November 2025

Here’s a best-effort list of words that fit today’s rules. Keep in mind: some are rare or unusual, so the official NYT answers may not include every single one. If you notice a word I’ve missed, drop it in the comments — you’ll help everyone else out.

Below are valid words you can form from the hive. Each contains N and uses only the letters N, O, P, X, U, E, D.

  1. expend
  2. pound
  3. undone
  4. done
  5. node
  6. noon
  7. pond
  8. pone
  9. open
  10. upon
  11. upend
  12. upended
  13. punned
  14. penned

Pangram of the Day

Expound – the perfect pangram for this puzzle. It not only uses all seven letters but also captures the feeling of racing to find those last few words before hitting Queen Bee status.

Quick tactics for any puzzle

Start with the center letter

Since every word must include it, try building short “roots” with that letter first, then expand.

Play with prefixes and suffixes

Look for common starters (like re-pre-tri-) and endings (like -er, -ry, -ing). These patterns often unlock multiple words.

Anagram your discoveries

Once you’ve found a word, shuffle its letters around — you’ll often uncover two or three more.

Use repeated letters

Remember, the same letter can appear more than once. Doubling letters opens up words you might otherwise overlook.

Hunt for pangrams

Try to use all seven letters at least once. Pangrams aren’t always easy, but when you find one, it feels like striking gold.

Habits to sharpen your skills

  • Begin with easy 4-letter words to get your brain moving.
  • Rotate vowels and consonants through different combinations to see what “clicks.”
  • Step away and return later — fresh eyes will catch words you missed.

Optional tools if you want extra help

Pen and paper

 Writing the letters down or sketching patterns can reveal hidden words.

Word-finding apps

Great for study or practice, but use sparingly if you want to keep the challenge.

Personal word journal

Track words you miss often — over time, you’ll train yourself to recognize them quickly.

Wrap-up

This grid is a tidy exercise in momentum: a few quick four-letter finds like open, pond, and done will open routes to the longer verbs and past-tense forms. Play patiently, try the vowel swaps, and let the puzzle’s rhythm reveal the rest — once you seed the board with a couple of N-anchors, the words start appearing quickly. How many did you find?