What connects Check, Beauty, St., Deutsche, and Question in Pinpoint #587?
They all come before the word 'mark': checkmark, beauty mark, St. Mark, Deutsche Mark, and question mark.
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Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links Check, Beauty, St., Deutsche, and Question — 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.
Check Beauty St. Deutsche — What connects Check, Beauty, St., Deutsche?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #587 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
When I saw today's board, my brain went in five completely different directions. Check? That's proofreading. Beauty? Cosmetics. St.? Saints or streets. Deutsche? German something. Question? Grammar class. How do you connect a checkmark with the Deutsche Mark with a question mark? The answer was literally staring at me the whole time—I just needed to stop thinking about what these words MEAN and start thinking about what word FOLLOWS them.
Once the answer was revealed, everything made perfect sense. Here's how each clue connects:
Look for what comes AFTER the clue
When clues span unrelated domains, they might all be prefixes to the same suffix. Testing 'mark' after each word revealed the pattern.
Currency hints are suffix goldmines
Deutsche Mark, British Pound, Japanese Yen—currency names often combine with country/descriptor words. Spot one, and you might unlock the whole puzzle.
Religious and geographic references overlap
St. Mark is both a saint and a famous Venetian landmark. Context flexibility helps these clues fit linguistic patterns.
Punctuation marks hide in plain sight
We use question marks and checkmarks daily without thinking about the word 'mark' in their names. Pinpoint loves exploiting this blindness.
They all come before the word 'mark': checkmark, beauty mark, St. Mark, Deutsche Mark, and question mark.
The Deutsche Mark was Germany's official currency from 1948 until 2002, when it was replaced by the Euro.
St. Mark refers to the Christian saint and evangelist, famous for St. Mark's Basilica and St. Mark's Square in Venice, Italy.
The diverse domains (punctuation, cosmetics, currency, religion) make it harder to see the 'mark' suffix pattern initially.