What connects Air, Hair, Makeup, Paint, Tooth in Pinpoint #559?
The connector is “Words that come before ‘brush'”. For example, Air + brush = Airbrush, and Hair + brush = Hairbrush.
Dauerhafte Antwort & Walkthrough (Pinpoint Today Archiv)
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links Air, Hair, Makeup, Paint, and Tooth - and what story do they share? Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then reveal the final connection and see how each clue fits together.
Air Hair Makeup Paint - What connects Air, Hair, Makeup, Paint?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #559 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
Today’s LinkedIn Pinpoint puzzle #559 begins with a curious pair: Air and Hair. My first instinct was to look for a theme of personal care or tools, but the next clue, Makeup, immediately stretched that theory thin. As Paint and Tooth appeared, it became clear that a simple category wouldn’t work, pushing me toward a more structural, wordplay-based connection.
| Clue Word | Example Phrase | Connection Explained |
|---|---|---|
| Air | “Airbrush” | An airbrush is a tool used for applying paint or makeup in a fine spray, commonly used in art and cosmetics. |
| Hair | “Hairbrush” | A hairbrush is a grooming tool specifically designed for brushing hair. |
| Makeup | “Foundation brush” | A foundation brush is a makeup tool specifically designed for applying foundation to the skin, highlighting the connection between makeup and the type of brush used. |
| Paint | “Paint brush” | A paint brush is a tool used for applying paint to a surface. |
| Tooth | “Toothbrush” | A toothbrush is a common dental tool used for cleaning teeth, highlighting the direct connection between 'tooth' and 'brush'. |
Once the answer was revealed, everything made perfect sense. Here's how each clue connects:
Beware the category trap
My first instinct was to lump ‘Hair,’ ‘Makeup,’ and ‘Tooth’ into a ‘personal care’ category. This puzzle teaches that a thematic link is often a red herring. Always test if your category works for every single clue before committing.
Scan for word components, not just meaning
The solution isn’t in the definition of the clues, but in their structure. Learning to look for a common prefix, suffix, or a word that can be appended to all clues is a powerful strategy for puzzles like this one.
Use an outlier to find the pattern
The clue ‘Paint’ was the key that broke my initial theory. When a clue seems out of place, don’t discard it; use it. Ask why it’s different and let that divergence lead you to the real connection that was hiding in plain sight.
The connector is “Words that come before ‘brush'”. For example, Air + brush = Airbrush, and Hair + brush = Hairbrush.
While ‘Hair,’ ‘Makeup,’ and ‘Tooth’ relate to grooming, the clues ‘Air’ and ‘Paint’ do not fit this category. A valid connector must work for all five clues without exception.
No, because only ‘Hair’ and ‘Paint’ would form a common phrase (hair comb, paint comb). ‘Air,’ ‘Makeup,’ and ‘Tooth’ do not naturally precede ‘comb,’ so it fails to connect all the clues.
If a category-based theory isn’t working, immediately shift to testing structural wordplay. Try adding a common word before, after, or inside each clue to see if a consistent phrase emerges.