Drink-related venues
Talk, pawn, thrift, and the idiom have nothing to do with beverages, so that theme collapses immediately.
Permanent answer & walkthrough (Pinpoint Today archive)
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links #1Coffee, #2Talk, #3Pawn, #4Thrift, and #5Like a bull in a china â 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.
#1Coffee #2Talk #3Pawn #4Thrift â What connects #1Coffee, #2Talk, #3Pawn, #4Thrift?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #564 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
Pinpoint 564 stacks #1Coffee, #2Talk, #3Pawn, #4Thrift, and #5Like a bull in a china. The clues bounce from cafés to workplace chatter, resale counters, secondhand aisles, and an English idiom. They only make sense together when you tack the same noun after each one and notice that every phrase becomes a different kind of shop.
Coffee shop is the cafĂ© on the corner, talk shop means to discuss work, a pawn shop buys and sells pledged items, a thrift shop sells second-hand goods, and âlike a bull in a china shopâ is the idiom about clumsy chaos in a delicate store. Each clue supplies the word that comes before âshopâ in a common expression, so words that come before âshopâ is the connector.
Thinking purely in terms of âstoresâ misses talk shop and the idiom, while chasing âconversationâ fails on pawn and thrift. Once you notice that every clue forms a phrase or idiom with the word âshopâ, the pattern is much tighter than a loose theme about retail or chatter.
Drink-related venues
Talk, pawn, thrift, and the idiom have nothing to do with beverages, so that theme collapses immediately.
Any kind of store
The connector isnât generic retailâitâs specifically the suffix âshop,â which even works with an idiom.
Fragile objects
Only the idiom references china; the other clues are about conversations or commerce.
| Word | Origin | In Context (Usage) | Meaning & Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1Coffee | â | âCoffee shopâ | A coffee shop is where you buy and sip espresso drinks. |
| #2Talk | â | âTalk shopâ | To talk shop means to discuss work topicsâstill formed by adding âshop.â |
| #3Pawn | â | âPawn shopâ | A pawn shop buys and sells used goods in exchange for short-term loans. |
| #4Thrift | â | âThrift shopâ | A thrift shop sells secondhand clothing and household items. |
| #5Like a bull in a china | â | âBull in a china shopâ | The idiom âlike a bull in a china shopâ completes the pattern with the same final word. |
Try common suffixes
When clues look like stand-alone nouns, add the same ending word and see if each phrase feels natural.
Respect idioms as clues
An idiom fragment can still signal the same connector if finishing the phrase uses the shared word.
Demand total coverage
A good hypothesis should explain every clue, even ones from wildly different contexts.
Each clue becomes a familiar phrase when you add the word âshopâ afterward.
Because âtalk shopâ is a conversation, not a storefrontâthe shared element is the exact word âshop,â not retail in general.
The idiom literally ends with âchina shop,â so it still uses the same suffix and belongs in the set.