June 30, 2026
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Be Furious NYT Crossword Clue: SEE RED Answer Explained

be furious nyt crossword

We’ve all been there: you’re staring at 9-Down, you know the vibe is pure rage, but ANGRY just won’t fit the six boxes in front of you. That’s “be furious” doing exactly what it’s designed to do — pushing you off the obvious word and toward an idiom instead.

The answer is SEE RED. It ran as 9-Down in the NYT puzzle dated August 24, 2025, clued straight — no question mark, no pun, just “Be furious.” That last detail matters more than it looks: a question mark after a clue tells you the answer is wordplay or a stretch (“Be furious?” might point somewhere weirder, like a pun on a name or brand). Without one, the NYT is telling you it wants the closest natural idiom for the phrase, and “see red” is exactly that — the everyday expression for snapping into sudden anger, the way a bull supposedly reacts to a red cape.

If SEE RED doesn’t fit your grid, this clue has appeared with shorter fills too, depending on the puzzle and the day of the week: RAGE and FUME at four letters, STEAM at five, SEETHE at six (a quieter, simmering cousin of SEE RED rather than a sudden flare-up).

Why Constructors Reach for Idioms Here

“Be ___” clues are a tell once you’ve seen enough of them. They’re rarely asking for a single adjective — they’re asking for the verb phrase that describes becoming that state.

  • “Be quiet” becomes PIPE DOWN.
  • “Be still” becomes STAY PUT.
  • “Be furious” becomes SEE RED.

Once you recognize that pattern, a whole category of clues that used to stump you starts clicking faster, because you stop hunting for synonyms and start hunting for phrases people actually say out loud.

It’s also a letter-efficient choice for constructors. SEE RED packs three vowels into six letters with a clean ending, which makes it easy to cross with other entries — part of why it keeps resurfacing in NYT grids rather than being a one-off. Constructors lean on idioms like this precisely because they’re flexible building blocks, not because they’re trying to be obscure.

A Word on “SEERED”

If you’ve seen sites listing the answer as the single word “SEERED,” that’s not a real word — it’s “SEE RED” with the space stripped out by sloppy scraping, sometimes mistakenly explained as a play on “seared” (as in, scorched meat). It isn’t related. The answer is two words, and the “burned” connection some sites draw is a guess dressed up as an explanation.

Other Anger Clues That Use the Same Logic

Once you’ve got SEE RED locked in, a few related clue-and-answer pairs tend to recur in NYT grids and are worth keeping in your back pocket:

  • “Boil” or “Steam” — often clued as standalone verbs for anger rather than idioms, usually shorter fills (4-5 letters)
  • “Fly off the handle” or “Do a slow burn” — longer idiom clues that point toward multi-word phrasal answers
  • “Become incensed” or “Become enraged” — more literal clue phrasing, usually pointing to single-word answers like SEETHE or FUME

Recognizing which register a clue is written in — literal definition versus idiom versus pun — is most of the battle with this category of clue.

Quick Reference

LettersLikely AnswerWhen It Fits
4RAGE / FUMEShort fills, early-week grids
5STEAMMid-length anger clues
6SEETHESlow-burn, internalized anger
6SEE REDConfirmed NYT answer, 9-Down, Aug 24 2025

A note on sourcing: a couple of secondary crossword-answer sites describe this same puzzle differently from each other — one calls it a Sunday grid built around company-name anagrams, another lists it as a standard NYT Daily titled “Mixed Company.” Since those don’t agree and neither is a primary NYT source, we’re not assigning a constructor name here until that’s confirmed against the NYT’s own archive. A wrong attribution does more damage than no attribution.

How to Get Faster at This Clue Type

A few habits that help with “be ___” and similar idiom-driven clues going forward:

  • Solve the crosses first. If you’re torn between SEETHE and SEE RED, fill in adjacent answers to confirm the letter count before committing.
  • Say the clue out loud. Idiom clues usually reveal themselves faster when spoken — “be furious” naturally invites “see red” as a spoken response in a way staring at the page doesn’t.
  • Track the day of the week. Monday and Tuesday grids favor more literal, dictionary-adjacent answers. By Thursday or the Sunday puzzle, expect idioms and wordplay to dominate.
  • Trust the grid over any answer site — including this one. If your crossing letters don’t match SEE RED, the puzzle you’re solving may simply be using a different answer for this clue than the one referenced here.

The Bottom Line

For the August 24, 2025 NYT puzzle, “Be furious” at 9-Down resolves to SEE RED — a clean, idiom-driven answer with no wordplay twist attached. If your grid calls for a different letter count, RAGE, FUME, STEAM, or SEETHE are the most likely substitutes. The bigger skill worth carrying forward is recognizing “be ___” as a signal to think in phrases, not single words — that pattern shows up constantly across NYT grids well beyond this one clue.

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    Adina Bekieva writes for Pure Magazine across business, lifestyle, technology, and current affairs. Her work covers industry shifts, digital trends, and consumer-focused stories, with an emphasis on how developments in markets and technology show up in everyday life. She also contributes profile pieces and feature articles on public figures and emerging topics.