What Does Strong Suit Crossword Clue Usually Mean?

2026-02-01 23:39:12 303

3 Answers

Lucas
Lucas
2026-02-02 13:40:08
There are a few flavors to the clue 'strong suit', and I always smile when I see it because my brain goes through the shortlist instantly. First is the skill/strength meaning: FORTE (commonly used) or ASSET. FORTE comes up a lot and crossword editors expect solvers to accept the English sense 'strong point' even if the everyday pronunciation debate exists. ASSET is plainer and often chosen when constructors want a neutral fill.

Second is the card-game meaning: TRUMP. If a puzzle has any card or competition theme, TRUMP is a favorite since it literally means the suit that overpowers others. Third is a literal clothing/armor angle—MAIL or ARMOR—if the clue's surface reading leans that way. When I'm working a puzzle I check the crossings, count the letters, and look for punctuation or a question mark that signals misdirection. Also pay attention to the puzzle's tone: a themed New York Times puzzle might prefer FORTE for elegance, while a quick puzzle might go with ASSET. For me, spotting which path to take is half the joy of solving, and seeing those crossings confirm a guess feels great.
Ursula
Ursula
2026-02-02 15:24:17
To me 'strong suit' is a classic crossword misdirect that usually boils down to three go-to fills depending on context: FORTE (one's particular strength), ASSET (an advantage or strength), or TRUMP (the dominating card suit). The trick is recognizing whether the clue intends the figurative meaning of a personal strength or the literal card-game meaning where one suit beats the others. Less commonly, constructors lean into a literal 'suit' like ARMOR or MAIL if the grid and clue style support that reading. My quick approach is: check enumeration and nearby themed answers, scan crossings, and note punctuation—question marks or quirky surfaces usually mean wordplay. Over the years I've found that FORTE and TRUMP appear in different types of puzzles with predictable frequency, so learning setter tendencies helps. Solving feels like detective work when a single two-word clue can be so many things, and I still enjoy that little tug-of-war between possibilities.
Isaac
Isaac
2026-02-07 16:00:07
I've noticed crossword setters love the neat double life of the phrase 'strong suit', and that makes it a really fun clue to unpack. When I see it in a puzzle my brain immediately flips through a few possibilities: the figurative meaning 'one's strength' (so FORTE or ASSET), the card-related meaning where a suit is made dominant (TRUMP), or even a literal clothing/Armor angle (MAIL or ARMOR), depending on how the crossings line up.

In practical solving, context matters more than you'd think. If the enumeration is five letters and the rest of the grid looks conversational, FORTE and ASSET are top bets—FORTE carries that slightly fancy vibe and shows up a lot in older themed puzzles, while ASSET is plainspoken and common. If the puzzle has a card or competition theme, TRUMP often slips in because it's concise and fits the idea of the 'strong' suit in trick-taking games. In cryptic or British-style clues, a literal reading (a suit that's physically strong, like armor) might be teased by a pun indicator.

My go-to move is to pencil in the crossing letters and test the tone of the puzzle. If the crossing across letters point to R?M?P, TRUMP becomes obvious; if it's F?R?E, FORTE looks right. Also watch for surface punctuation: a question mark hints strongly at wordplay. I love these little moments when a single phrase can branch into multiple logical fills—it's like solving a tiny riddle inside a riddle, and it never gets old for me.
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