Business
‘Trademarked No More’ Puzzle Features Everyday Generic Terms
The New York Times’ popular word-search game Strands delivered a clever challenge on Sunday, March 22, 2026, with puzzle No. 749 themed “Trademarked no more.” Players navigated a grid of letters to uncover words that started as protected brand names but entered everyday language as generic terms for entire product categories — a linguistic phenomenon known as genericide.

The puzzle, accessible via nytimes.com/games or the NYT Games app, tasked solvers with finding six theme words plus a spangram that spans the board and encapsulates the theme. Strands, launched in 2023 as a daily brain teaser blending elements of word search and crossword mechanics, has grown into a favorite alongside Wordle and Connections, drawing millions for its mix of logic, vocabulary and occasional tricky twists.
Today’s theme clue, “Trademarked no more,” pointed solvers toward proprietary eponyms — brand names that lost trademark protection through widespread use. The spangram, GENERICTERM, described the process itself: when a trademark becomes so common it refers to the product type rather than a specific maker.
Reliable sources including the NYT’s own Strands Sidekick hints page, CNET, Forbes, TechRadar and dedicated puzzle sites like strands.today confirmed the full solution as of early Sunday morning ET (late Sunday in Australia). The spangram GENERICTERM snakes across the grid, starting typically from a letter in the left column around the third row, winding horizontally and vertically to touch opposite sides.
The five supporting theme words were:
– ASPIRIN — Once a Bayer trademark for acetylsalicylic acid pain reliever, now the generic name for the drug worldwide (though Bayer retains the trademark in some countries).
– DUMPSTER — Originally a Dempster Brothers brand for large trash containers, it became synonymous with any wheeled garbage bin.
– ESCALATOR — Otis Elevator Company’s trademark that entered common parlance for moving staircases.
– THERMOS — A historic brand for vacuum-insulated flasks, now used generically for any such container.
– ZIPPER — B.F. Goodrich’s 1920s trademark for boot fasteners with interlocking teeth, later applied to any slide fastener.
These words appeared scattered in the 6×8 or similar grid, with letters shared among overlapping paths. Solvers often started with shorter, more obvious entries like ZIPPER or ASPIRIN before hunting the longer spangram. Hints from the NYT included partial letter reveals and directional clues for up to three words at a time via the Sidekick feature, helping players avoid frustration on what some rated as a “challenging” difficulty.
The puzzle’s design rewarded pattern recognition: many theme words featured common suffixes or roots tied to their original branding stories. For instance, “escalator” derives from “escalade” (to climb), while “thermos” comes from Greek for heat. The grid included distracting filler words like common short terms to mimic real trademark drift confusion.
Strands continues evolving under NYT Games, with daily refreshes at midnight ET. Sunday’s edition followed Saturday’s lighter fare and preceded Monday’s anticipated release. Community discussions on Reddit’s r/NYTStrands and X highlighted quick solves for veterans familiar with genericide examples, though newcomers appreciated the educational angle on intellectual property law.
The theme resonates in an era of brand ubiquity: think Kleenex for tissues, Band-Aid for adhesive bandages, or Google as a verb for searching — all risking or having lost trademark status in parts of the world. Puzzle creators drew from real legal history, where companies like Bayer fought (and sometimes lost) to protect marks through vigilant advertising and policing.
For those stuck, early hints suggested focusing on household items or medical terms. The spangram’s 11 letters made it the longest path, often requiring zigzagging to connect G-E-N-E-R-I-C-T-E-R-M without skipping letters or reusing cells improperly.
Strands remains free with limited daily plays or via NYT subscription for unlimited access and archives. Its growing popularity stems from quick 5-15 minute sessions that blend fun with subtle learning — today’s puzzle quietly schooled players on how language evolves beyond corporate control.
As March 22 winds down, solvers who nailed GENERICTERM and its companions celebrated streak preservation. With no hints needed for some and full reveals aiding others, the puzzle exemplified Strands’ balance of accessibility and depth. Tomorrow brings fresh letters and a new theme, keeping the daily ritual alive for word enthusiasts worldwide.
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