What shared word links "English" and "Dog" in LinkedIn Pinpoint #684?
The answer is Words that come before "roses" because English, Dog, Damask, Hybrid Tea, and the final idiom all resolve cleanly with roses.
Permanent Pinpoint answer & analysis (Pinpoint Today archive)
Published on 03/15/2026
Updated on 03/16/2026
This Pinpoint answer guide asks what shared idea links English, Dog, Damask, (Hybrid) Tea, and Stop and smell the (๐น๐น๐น). Follow the spoiler-safe hints one by one, then see how each clue clicks into the final answer.
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English and Dog both feel broad at first, so the board starts with more ambiguity than it really deserves. The opening clues stay ambiguous until Damask 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.
Those clues can point toward nationality, animals, or generic compound phrases if you read them too early.
Damask is the clue that tightens everything.
Damask roses sounds like a real horticulture phrase, which suddenly makes English roses, Dog roses, and Hybrid tea roses all feel natural too.
The final clue then confirms the same connector through the idiom stop and smell the roses.
The answer was Words that come before "roses".
This puzzle works because it mixes formal rose terminology with one everyday saying, so the board feels broader until the right flower word arrives.
Words that come before โrosesโ
| Clue | Early read | Resolved read | Why it works |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | generic compound words | "English roses" | "English roses" works because the phrase is a familiar gardening and beauty expression once the flower frame appears. |
| Dog | generic compound words | "Dog roses" | "Dog roses" fits through the wild rose species and helps show the board is about exact rose phrases, not vague flower language. |
| Damask | generic compound words | "Damask roses" | "Damask roses" is the turning clue because it sounds like a precise rose classification rather than a broad descriptive phrase. |
| (Hybrid) Tea | generic compound words | "hybrid tea roses" | "Hybrid tea roses" confirms the answer because it is a standard catalog or horticulture term. |
| Stop and smell the (๐น๐น๐น) | generic compound words | "stop and smell the roses" | The idiom "stop and smell the roses" gives the same connector in plain language and acts as the final confirmation. |
Formal terminology can unlock a board of broad words
When the early clues feel vague, a later clue from a more specialized vocabulary often reveals the real pattern.
Phrase boards can mix technical and everyday language
Hybrid tea roses and stop and smell the roses live in very different registers, but they still point to the same connector.
Botanical boards often hide inside normal words
English and Dog feel ordinary until a plant-specific clue like Damask forces the rose reading.
The answer is Words that come before "roses" because English, Dog, Damask, Hybrid Tea, and the final idiom all resolve cleanly with roses.
The connection is a phrase pattern built around roses. Some clues point to rose types or classifications, while the last clue confirms the same word through a common saying.
Damask is the turning clue because Damask roses is the most specialized and least flexible phrase on the board, which pulls the earlier clues into the same pattern.