LinkedIn Pinpoint #683 Answer & Analysis 

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What connects Start, Positive, Alarm, Tooth and Advertising (don't believe it!) in LinkedIn Pinpoint 683 — and why? We've got you covered! Try the hints first — you might crack it before the reveal.

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Puzzle Number

683

Date

2026-03-14

LinkedIn Pinpoint 683 Clues & Answer
Pinpoint 683 Clues:

💡 Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue to see how it connects to the answer

#1
Start
#2
Positive
#3
Alarm
#4
Tooth
#5
Advertising (don't believe it!)
Pinpoint 683 Answer:
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🚨 LinkedIn Pinpoint 683 Answer — Start, Positive, Alarm, Tooth, Advertising (don't believe it!)

Published: March 14, 2026 · Answer: Words that come after false

That cheeky parenthetical — "(don't believe it!)" — is basically the puzzle waving a neon sign that says "FALSE."

But let me tell you about my detour. I started with "Alarm" and immediately went to fire alarms, burglar alarms, alarm clocks. Then "Start" — a starting gun? A fresh start? "Positive" — staying positive? COVID positive?

My first theory was "things that trigger action." An alarm triggers a response, a start triggers movement, a positive test triggers a protocol. It was abstract and shaky.

"Tooth" demolished it. How does a tooth trigger action? Unless you have a toothache, I guess. I was stuck.

"Advertising (don't believe it!)" saved me. Don't believe it — it's false. False advertising. FALSE. And then: false start, false positive, false alarm, false tooth.

Every clue becomes a common phrase when you put "false" in front of it. A false start in a race. A false positive in medical testing. A false alarm that gets your heart racing for nothing. A false tooth — a dental prosthetic.

The range here is great. Sports, medicine, security, dentistry, and law. One little word — "false" — and it touches every part of life. I'm particularly fond of "false alarm" because it's both a literal thing (a malfunctioning fire alarm) and an everyday expression (panicking over nothing).

✅ Pinpoint 683 Answer

Words that come after false

ClueFull PhraseWhat It Means
StartFalse startA false start occurs when a competitor begins before the signal, commonly used in sports like sprinting and swimming
PositiveFalse positiveA false positive is an incorrect test result that wrongly indicates a condition is present, common in medical and software testing
AlarmFalse alarmA false alarm is a warning triggered without a real emergency, such as a fire alarm going off by mistake
ToothFalse toothFalse teeth (dentures) are prosthetic devices used to replace missing teeth

🎯 Final Takeaways

  1. Parenthetical jokes = answer hints. "(don't believe it!)" is literally telling you the advertising is FALSE. The puzzle's humor isn't random — it's a wink at the answer. Whenever a parenthetical comment expresses an opinion or reaction (like skepticism, disbelief, or surprise), translate that emotion into a word. Skepticism → false. That's your answer.
  2. Test negative/opposite words. My first instinct was to look for a category, but these clues are fragments waiting for a prefix. When clues seem random but short (one word each), try negative words as prefixes: false, wrong, bad, mis-, non-. I didn't think to try "false" until the last clue forced it on me — but testing negative prefixes early could have saved four clues' worth of confusion.
  3. Cross-domain validation works. False start (sports), false positive (medicine), false alarm (security), false tooth (dentistry), false advertising (law) — five unrelated fields, one shared prefix. When your candidate word produces recognized phrases across that many domains, you can be 100% certain. The wider the spread, the stronger the confirmation.
  4. Dental clues are always surprising. "False tooth" is the odd one out here — it's the most old-fashioned, least intuitive phrase in the set. But that's exactly why it's valuable: if your theory accommodates even the weirdest clue, it's rock solid. Don't let an unexpected fit make you doubt; let it make you confident.

FAQ

Q1: What happens after a false start in the Olympics? Under current World Athletics rules (since 2010), any athlete who false starts is immediately disqualified — no second chances. Before 2003, athletes got one warning. The rule change was made to prevent deliberate false starts used as a psychological tactic.

Q2: How common are false positives in medical testing? It depends on the test. COVID rapid antigen tests have a false positive rate of about 1-2%. Mammography screens have a cumulative false positive rate of about 50% over 10 years of annual screening. No medical test is 100% accurate.

Q3: Is false advertising illegal? Yes, in most countries. In the US, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Act prohibits "unfair or deceptive acts or practices." Companies can face fines, lawsuits, and mandatory corrective advertising. Famous cases include Volkswagen's "Dieselgate" ($14.7 billion settlement) and Red Bull's "gives you wings" claim ($13 million settlement).

Q4: What's the difference between a false tooth and a dental implant? A false tooth (denture) sits on top of the gums and is removable. A dental implant is a titanium screw surgically placed into the jawbone with a permanent crown attached. Implants are more stable but significantly more expensive.

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