Weather themes
Rain and Meteor storms feel atmospheric, but Baby has nothing to do with the forecast.
Réponse permanente et walkthrough (archive Pinpoint Today)
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links Hot, Cold, Rain, Baby, and Meteor — 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.
Hot Cold Rain Baby — What connects Hot, Cold, Rain, Baby?
LinkedIn Pinpoint #574 Answer:
Detailed breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling
Pinpoint 574 lines up Hot, Cold, Rain, Baby, and Meteor—everyday words that leap between bathrooms, nurseries, and astronomy chats. Each clue paints a different scene, so the challenge is to discover the single noun that keeps showing up in the background. Can you figure out what ties them all together?
Pinpoint Answer Today asks: what links Hot, Cold, Rain, Baby, and Meteor — 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. Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then reveal the final connection and see how each clue fits together. ” Hot and cold describe water temperature, rain shower is a weather pattern, a baby shower is a party for expectant parents, and a meteor shower is a sky event like the Leonids. The shared connector is the word “shower” that follows each clue to make a common phrase.
Weather themes
Rain and Meteor storms feel atmospheric, but Baby has nothing to do with the forecast.
Party types
Only Baby points to a celebration; the rest describe temperatures or celestial events.
Temperature adjectives
Hot and Cold fit, yet Rain and Meteor are nouns, so a pure temperature category breaks down.
| Word | Origin | In Context (Usage) | Meaning & Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot | — | “Hot shower” | Temperature-focused phrase that begins with “hot.” |
| Cold | — | “Cold shower” | Another temperature-based phrase that pairs naturally with “shower.” |
| Rain | — | “Rain shower” | Weather pattern clue that shares the same noun. |
| Baby | — | “Baby shower” | Celebration clue confirming the connector works outside weather. |
| Meteor | — | “Meteor shower” | Astronomy clue that seals the repeated noun. |
Test repeated nouns
Read each clue with the same noun placed after it; if the phrase still sounds natural, you may have found the connector.
Look for everyday collocations
Common two-word phrases often bridge wildly different topics—here they span weather, parties, and astronomy.
Reject partial themes quickly
If a hypothesis fails on even one clue, move on; the correct connector must explain all five entries cleanly.
Each word forms a familiar phrase when paired with the same noun. The walkthrough shows how every clue fits once you add that shared word.
Baby refers to a celebration, not the forecast, so a weather-only explanation can’t cover all five clues.
It references the celebration named after welcoming a newborn. The connector is about the type of event, not an individual.