Bee Roots for 2021-12-23

The table provides clues for the roots of words in today's NY Times Spelling Bee. You're responsible for prefixes, suffixes, tense changes, plurals, doubling consonants before suffixes, and alternate spellings of roots. The TL;DR about the site comes after the table. The Halloween, 2021 redesign improved the usability, I hope.

Past clues are available here

Today's puzzle

Table content

root #answers coveredanswer's first two lettersanswer's lengthclue for root (answer may need prefix, suffix, tense change, alt spelling, ...)
21AC6Find someone not guilty of a criminal charge
11AC8Make someone aware of or familiar with
31AQ4Water in Spain
31AQ7Water in Spain
41AQ8Person who swims under water
51AQ8Print resembling a watercolor, produced from a copper plate etched with nitric acid
61AU4Parent’s sister
71CI8Five-line stanza
91IN6TurboTax company, or know by feeling rather than evidence
151QU4Give up
111QU5Expert at analyzing and managing numerical data, especially in finance
131QU5One of five identical children
101QU6Attractively unusual or old-fashioned
121QU6In physics, a discrete amount of energy (… mechanics)
141QU8Pole to practice jousting, also called a pavo
171TA4Not slack, as a rope, adj.
161TA5Provoke with words
181TU4Chicken of the sea (Ahi …)
211TU4Ballet skirt, or S Afr Bishop Desmond
191TU5Upper body garment in a uniform or in ancient Greece & Rome
201TU5All together, musically (Italian); Little Richard “Wop bop a loo bop” song
221UN4Something whole on its own but part of larger thing (apartment, Army squad, e.g.)
81UN5Divide into pieces with a knife or other sharp implement, verb/noun

About this site

This site provides clues for a day's New York Times Spelling Bee puzzle. It exists to make it easier for Kevin Davis to take a day off. Most of the clues come from him. There may be some startup problems, but long term I think I can put the clues together with no more than half an hour's work.

The "Bee Roots" approach is to provide explicit clues for root words, not every word. This is similar to what Kevin Davis does, but without information about parts of speech As logophiles, we are pretty good at putting on prefixes and suffixes, changing tense, and forming plurals (including Latin plurals!). The clues cover root words, arranged alphabetically by root word, with a count of words in the puzzle that come from each root. For example, if a puzzle includes ROAM and ROAMING, there will be a clue for ROAM and a count of 2. The root may not appear in the puzzle at all; for example, the 2021-07-23 Bee included ICED, DEICE, and DEICED. For such a puzzle, the clue would be for ICE with a word count of 3.

The Bee Roots approach involves judgement sometimes. For example, if a puzzle includes LOVE, LOVED, and LOVELY, how many roots are needed to cover them? LOVE and LOVED share the root LOVE, certainly, but LOVELY is tricky. LOVE is part of its etymology, but by now, the word means "exquisitely beautiful," which is a lot farther from the meaning of LOVE than swithcing to past tense. I'm inclined to treat LOVE and LOVELY as separate roots. You may not agree, which is fine. Another thing we logophiles share is a LOVE of arguing about words on Twitter.

One last complication, until another one pops up: a few roots have multiple spellings, for example LOLLYGAG and LALLYGAG. Depending on the day's letters, and maybe even the editor's whims, one or both could be in the puzzle's answer list. With such roots, you could see a word count of 2, even if there are no applicable prefixes or suffixes.

I will do my best to keep this site up to date and helpful (I hope). Check it out, and tweet feedback to @donswartwout Tweet to @donswartwout

Many thanks to Kevin Davis, whose 4,500-word clue list made this possible.