How Does Tithe Crossword Clue Appear In Cryptic Puzzles?

2026-01-31 21:25:19 170
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4 Answers

Nathan
Nathan
2026-02-01 06:48:34
I'm the kind of solver who likes quick, clever clues, and 'tithe' surfaces in crosswords in a few dependable ways. Straight definition is the simplest: clues that read like 'Church payment (5)' or 'Give a tenth (5)' point directly to TITHE. More fun are wordplay routes: a charade like 'tit' (small bird) + 'he' (male) = TITHE is delightfully tidy, and I always check for that when a clue's surface mentions birds or men.

Setters also hide TITHE inside longer phrases — for instance, 'beaT IT HEre' contains T I T H E in order — so a concealed/hidden indicator like 'in' or 'contained' can flag that technique. And don't forget thematic routes where 'tithe' might be clued by 'tenth' synonyms such as 'decile' or playful references to 'ten' (X). I keep a mental checklist of these patterns, and it saves me time during the heat of a timed puzzle; feels like cheating in the best possible way.
Wyatt
Wyatt
2026-02-03 03:57:57
My puzzle-writer brain appreciates how flexible 'tithe' is as a cryptic fodder. Because it literally means a tenth, setters exploit numerical and morphological angles: you’ll see clues that define it directly, clues that define 'tenth' (so answers like 'decile' might appear), and clues that use numerals—X or TEN—to suggest a tenth element in a charade. One of my favorite reliable constructions is the charade 'tit' + 'he' = TITHE, which is economical and fair: 'tit' is a common bird in crossword-land and 'he' is a frequent pronoun, so the surface can be anything involving a bird and a man.

Hidden clues are also textbook: a phrase such as 'beat it, he' conceals TITHE across words, so watch for containment indicators ('in', 'within', 'hidden in'). Less common but charming is the &lit or cryptic-definition style where the whole clue both defines and hints at the mechanism—something like 'Give one tenth? (5)' works perfectly as both definition and gag. For rapid solving, I scan for short animal names plus pronouns for charades and for chunks of five letters that might be lying across word breaks; those habits nab TITHE surprisingly often, and I enjoy the little click when it lands.
Finn
Finn
2026-02-03 13:43:02
Oddly satisfying little word, 'tithe' shows up in puzzles more often than you'd expect. I tend to spot it as a straight definition ('Church payment (5)' or 'Give a tenth (5)'), but the charade trick is my go-to: 'tit' (a small bird) + 'he' gives TITHE, so clues that mention birds or males are instant suspects. There's also the hidden-device angle — setters love hiding TITHE across two words, so look for containment indicators or awkward surfaces that might conceal those five letters.

On top of that, thematic setters sometimes angle at 'tenth' with words like 'decile' or playful references to X/TEN in the clue. For me, the pleasure is in catching a hidden or charade build mid-parse; it's a tiny win that makes the puzzle feel friendlier.
Julia
Julia
2026-02-05 16:24:44
I love the little tricks setters use, and 'tithe' is one of those words that lends itself to several neat cryptic devices. Often it's clued literally as the definition — something like 'Church payment (5)' simply yields TITHE, with the definition at either end of the clue. But setters also get playful: a common trick is to treat 'tithe' as meaning 'one tenth' and clue related forms like 'tenth', 'decile' or even historically linked words (think of how 'decimate' originally meant taking a tenth). Those kinds of thematic substitutions happen when the surface wants a churchy feel but the setter wants a fresher answer.

Wordplay-wise, I especially like the charade and hidden plays. You can build TITHE from smaller parts — for example 'tit' (a small bird) + 'he' (male pronoun) gives TITHE, so a clue like 'Small bird seen to be male, church payment (5)' parses cleanly. Alternatively, TITHE can be concealed across word boundaries: the phrase 'beat it, he' literally contains the letters T-I-T-H-E in order. Keep an eye out for Roman numeral/ten wordplay too — X or TEN can be used in cryptic builds that hint at a tenth. Personally, spotting a hidden TITHE in a long surface always gives me a small victory; it feels like catching a wink from the setter.
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