2026-05-29
Daily Slang Puzzle Answers
The puzzle has four clean sets. First are positive reactions: cool, awesome, solid, sweet. Second are words for something strange or unsettling: messed up, weird, weirded out, sketched out. Third are casual invitations to eat or drink: grab a bite, grab a coffee, grab a drink, grab some food. Fourth are casual goodbye phrases: later, later on, see ya, catch you later.
This page gives the answer groups, the reason each group belongs together, simple phrase meanings, example sentences, common traps, and links to related slang guides when a guide is available.
Today's Categories
- positive reactions: cool, awesome, solid, sweet
- things that feel off or unsettling: messed up, weird, weirded out, sketched out
- casual food or drink invites: grab a bite, grab a coffee, grab a drink, grab some food
- casual ways to say goodbye later: later, later on, see ya, catch you later
easy
positive reactions
These are all casual words people use to say something is good, nice, or acceptable.
Why these words belong together: each word in this set points to the same casual meaning, situation, or tone. If you missed this group, look for the shared scene rather than the exact dictionary definition.
Example: "cool" can work when the conversation fits the category positive reactions.
Example: "awesome" can work when the conversation fits the category positive reactions.
Example: "solid" can work when the conversation fits the category positive reactions.
Example: "sweet" can work when the conversation fits the category positive reactions.
medium
things that feel off or unsettling
These all describe something strange, bad, or making someone uncomfortable.
Why these words belong together: each word in this set points to the same casual meaning, situation, or tone. If you missed this group, look for the shared scene rather than the exact dictionary definition.
Example: "messed up" can work when the conversation fits the category things that feel off or unsettling.
Example: "weird" can work when the conversation fits the category things that feel off or unsettling.
Example: "weirded out" can work when the conversation fits the category things that feel off or unsettling.
Example: "sketched out" can work when the conversation fits the category things that feel off or unsettling.
easy
casual food or drink invites
These are all casual ways to invite someone to eat or drink together.
Why these words belong together: each word in this set points to the same casual meaning, situation, or tone. If you missed this group, look for the shared scene rather than the exact dictionary definition.
Example: "grab a bite" can work when the conversation fits the category casual food or drink invites.
Example: "grab a coffee" can work when the conversation fits the category casual food or drink invites.
Example: "grab a drink" can work when the conversation fits the category casual food or drink invites.
Example: "grab some food" can work when the conversation fits the category casual food or drink invites.
tricky
casual ways to say goodbye later
These are all informal ways people say goodbye and mean they will talk or see each other again later.
Why these words belong together: each word in this set points to the same casual meaning, situation, or tone. If you missed this group, look for the shared scene rather than the exact dictionary definition.
Example: "later" can work when the conversation fits the category casual ways to say goodbye later.
Example: "later on" can work when the conversation fits the category casual ways to say goodbye later.
Example: "see ya" can work when the conversation fits the category casual ways to say goodbye later.
Example: "catch you later" can work when the conversation fits the category casual ways to say goodbye later.
Common Traps
A trap word is a word that feels close to one group but actually belongs somewhere else. With slang, traps often happen because one phrase has more than one meaning. When the board is tricky, use the answer explanations to compare the near misses.