⛵ LinkedIn Pinpoint 672 Answer — Boat, Insurance, Expectancy, Preserver, Sciences (biology studies it)
Published: March 3, 2026 · Answer: Words that come after life
"Sciences (biology studies it)" — that hint was doing some serious heavy lifting, and I almost missed it.
I actually started by staring at "Preserver" and thinking about jam. Like, fruit preserves? Then "Insurance" popped up and I was briefly in a finance headspace. Life insurance? Health insurance? Boat insurance?
Wait — lifeboat. Life insurance. Life expectancy. Life preserver. Life sciences.
The word "life" snaps onto every single clue like a Lego brick. But here's what tripped me up: "Boat" by itself doesn't scream "life." Neither does "Expectancy" in isolation. It's only when you mentally prepend "life" that each fragment becomes a complete, meaningful phrase.
"Life preserver" made me feel silly for my jam theory. And "life sciences" — as the parenthetical helpfully explained — is what biology studies. The science of life, literally.
This is a classic "word that comes before/after" puzzle, and "life" is one of those incredibly productive English words that combines with dozens of other words. Lifestyle, lifelong, lifeline, lifespan — the list goes on.
✅ Pinpoint 672 Answer
Words that come after life
| Clue | Full Phrase | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Boat | Lifeboat | A rescue vessel carried on ships for emergency evacuation at sea, forming the compound word "lifeboat" |
| Insurance | Life insurance | A financial product that provides a payout to beneficiaries upon the policyholder's death, forming "life insurance" |
| Expectancy | Life expectancy | The statistical average number of years a person is expected to live, forming the term "life expectancy" |
| Preserver | Life preserver | A flotation device designed to keep a person afloat in water, commonly called a "life preserver" |
| Sciences (biology studies it) | Life sciences | Academic fields that study living organisms, including biology, botany, and zoology, collectively known as "life sciences" |
🧬 What Helped
- Try common "big" words. When clues feel like fragments waiting for a prefix, run through high-frequency English words: life, time, water, fire, light, back. I tried "first" before landing on "life" — close but not quite. These big, versatile words combine with dozens of others, making them prime candidates for before/after puzzles.
- Parenthetical clues decode the obscure. "(biology studies it)" instantly turns the vague clue "Sciences" into "Life sciences." Without that parenthetical, "Sciences" could pair with dozens of prefixes. This is the puzzle being generous — it knows "Sciences" alone is too broad, so it narrows the field for you. Always decode the parenthetical first.
- Two water-related clues can coexist. Lifeboat and life preserver are both nautical rescue items, and I briefly worried the answer was too specific to water. But they're genuinely different things — one's a vessel, one's a flotation device. Don't reject an answer just because two clues overlap thematically; as long as each clue is a distinct phrase, it's valid.
FAQ
Q1: What is the average global life expectancy today? Global average life expectancy is approximately 73 years as of recent WHO data. Japan leads at around 84 years, while some Sub-Saharan African countries have averages below 60 years.
Q2: When was life insurance invented? The first modern life insurance policy was issued in 1583 in London, covering a man named William Gibbons for 12 months. The first dedicated life insurance company, the Amicable Society, was founded in London in 1706.
Q3: What's the difference between a life preserver and a life jacket? A life preserver (also called a lifebuoy or life ring) is a ring-shaped flotation device thrown to someone in the water. A life jacket (or personal flotation device) is worn on the body. Both save lives, but they serve different rescue scenarios.
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