Permanent Pinpoint answer & analysis (Pinpoint Today archive)

LinkedIn Pinpoint #529 Answer & Analysis

Published on 10/11/2025

Updated on 10/11/2025

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This Pinpoint answer guide asks what shared idea links Bottle, Survey, Pool, Bucket, and Tooth cavity. Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then see how each clue clicks into the final answer.

Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue before you reveal the Pinpoint answer

Pinpoint Answer for LinkedIn Pinpoint 529

Detailed Pinpoint answer breakdown continues just below - keep scrolling

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By Pinpoint Answer Today

Published on 10/11/2025

Category board · Obvious · Turning clue: Tooth cavity

Pinpoint 529 Answer & Full Analysis

Bottle and Pool can make the board feel like it wants containers or liquids, but Survey immediately fights that read. The opening clues stay ambiguous until Tooth cavity gives the board a cleaner test, so this guide starts with the misleading first read, then uses the later clues to show why the final connection is narrower than the early guesses and how each clue checks that same pattern without relying on the answer reveal too early.

Bucket keeps the clue set concrete, which makes it easy to miss that the connector is really an action.

Tooth cavity is the clue that tightens it.

Fill a Tooth cavity is such a specific phrase that fill stops being a loose guess and becomes the clean verb for the whole board.

After that, fill a Bottle, fill out a Survey, fill a Pool, and fill a Bucket all read naturally.

The answer was Things you can fill.

This is a good reminder that some category boards are really built around one reusable verb.

Solved Connection

Things you can fill

Clue-by-clue evidence

Clue-by-clue evidence showing the early misread, resolved reading, and why each clue fits
ClueEarly readResolved readWhy it works
Bottlecontainers or liquids"fill a bottle"Bottle works because fill a bottle is the most literal and immediate version of the shared action.
Surveycontainers or liquids"fill out a survey"Survey widens the board because fill out a survey is a form action, not a container action, which keeps the verb flexible.
Poolcontainers or liquids"fill a pool"Pool confirms the same verb still works in a much larger physical context than bottle or bucket.
Bucketcontainers or liquids"fill a bucket"Bucket is a clean confirmation because the phrase is ordinary and reinforces that the connector is an action you perform.
Tooth cavitymedical or dental topic"fill a tooth cavity"Tooth cavity is the turning clue because fill a tooth cavity is such a specific phrase that the shared verb stops feeling optional.

Lessons Learned from Pinpoint #529

  1. 1

    Mixed nouns often hide one verb

    If the clues refuse to sit inside one obvious category, test whether the same action works cleanly with each of them.

  2. 2

    The strangest clue may be the lock

    Tooth cavity feels more specialized than the other clues, and that is exactly why it is the best clue for confirming fill.

  3. 3

    Form clues can broaden a physical board

    Survey matters because it keeps the answer from collapsing into a simple container theme and pushes you toward a reusable verb.

FAQ

What final category connects "Bottle" and "Survey" in LinkedIn Pinpoint #529?

The answer is Things you can fill because Bottle, Survey, Pool, Bucket, and Tooth cavity all pair naturally with fill.

How do "Bottle" and "Survey" connect in LinkedIn Pinpoint #529?

The connection is one shared action. You can fill a bottle, fill out a survey, fill a pool, fill a bucket, and fill a tooth cavity.

Why is "Tooth cavity" the key clue in LinkedIn Pinpoint #529?

Tied clue: Tooth cavity

Tooth cavity is the turning clue because fill a tooth cavity is much more specific than the other phrases and makes the shared verb feel exact.