How Can Strong Suit Crossword Clue Fit Into A Six-Letter Answer?

2026-02-01 11:07:12 190

3 Answers

Henry
Henry
2026-02-02 13:06:19
On a more tactical note, I often approach 'strong suit' as a little riddle where the setter might be hinting at either a physical suit or a metaphorical specialty. Practically speaking, there are a handful of six-letter candidates I always run through in my head: 'armour', 'trumps', 'talent', 'skills', and sometimes the plural 'fortes'. Each one maps onto a slightly different reading of the clue.

When I parse quickly, I check for plural indicators and the puzzle's dialect. 'Armour' is six letters in British English and fits a literal 'suit' meaning a suit of protective gear. 'Trumps' fits if the clue is card-related — a 'strong suit' can be the trump suit that beats others. For idiomatic interpretations, 'talent' or 'skills' are straightforward synonyms for someone's forte. I also pay attention to punctuation or placement in a themed puzzle: a theme might nudge the setter to use a particular register (archaic, nautical, card terms, etc.). Ultimately, the crossing letters are king. If crossings carve out an A-M-O-U-R pattern, I happily slot in 'armour'; if they spell T-A-L-E-N-T, that becomes the right call. I like that the clue forces you to flip between literal and figurative thinking — it keeps solving lively and slightly cheeky.
Grayson
Grayson
2026-02-03 07:55:27
I get a real kick out of how a tiny clue like 'strong suit' can bend into several different six-letter fills depending on tone and crossing letters.

If you treat the clue literally, one of the neat fits is 'armour' (British spelling). 'Suit' can be taken as a suit of Armor, and 'strong' signals the idea of protection or strength — so 'armour' works perfectly for a six-letter entry. That reading leans on a surface image (a suit that's literally strong) and is common in British-style cryptics and themed puzzles that like a wink toward old-fashioned gear. Another literal-ish option is 'trumps' — in card games a suit that's strong becomes the trump suit; pluralized it fills six letters and matches a playful surface reading.

If the clue is more figurative, then words like 'talent' or 'skills' are excellent six-letter matches. 'Strong suit' used as an idiom means one's specialty, so 'talent' (6) or 'skills' (6) are natural synonyms. When I solve, I usually keep all these possibilities in mind and lean on crossing letters: if I have an A as the second letter and R as the third, 'armour' looks great; if I have L and E toward the end, 'talent' screams louder. So, parse the clue for whether it's literal/physical, figurative, or card-sense, then let the crosses pick the right six-letter fill — that little flip from surface to sense is what makes crosswords fun for me.
Ruby
Ruby
2026-02-07 17:14:29
If I had to settle on the most likely six-letter fits for 'strong suit' without any crossings, I'd lean toward a small shortlist and explain why: 'armour' (British spelling) nails the literal interpretation — a suit that's strong is protective armor — while 'talent' and 'skills' cover the idiomatic meaning of someone's specialty. 'Trumps' is a neat card-game reading where a suit becomes dominant. In practice I treat the clue like a pivot: first decide if the setter is being literal, figurative, or playful with cards, then use cross letters to lock it down. I often enjoy the mental hop from the surface image (a knight in a suit) to the idiom (someone's forte) — that flip is pure crossword joy for me.
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