Fill in each blank with a single word to create a common phrase, brand, or title that starts with the given number. Notice the spacing, hyphenation, and italics to help you, where italics indicates the title of a movie or TV show. The parentheses indicate the number of letters in the blank.
For example, 40 ___ (5) has the 5-letter answer WINKS. Don't forget to use the letter bank to help you figure out what letters are left!
To figure out how to place all the words on the board, it may be helpful to see what all the numbers in the clues add up to. Remember what your total score should be! The final answer is the letters placed in the boxed squares read from top to bottom.
The number in each clue represents the score you get from playing it. So, for example, WINKS should score 40 points. The order you play the words may matter because in Scrabble, each bonus square only counts for the first word played on it, though the scores from the individual letters can count more than once. Be careful: some words have multiple ways they could be played to get the same target score, but only one way will allow all the words to intersect.
Only three words—HOURS, KARAT, and WINKS—can be made using a Double Word Score square. And using the other bonus squares in the center row and column, only one of those three can be played on the Double Word Score star, which means you know which word is played first.
Three different words intersect DRESSES, one at each "S."