LinkedIn Pinpoint #693 Answer & Analysis 

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What connects Mahalo, Danke, Arigato, Merci and Gracias in LinkedIn Pinpoint 693 — and why? We've got you covered! Try the hints first — you might crack it before the reveal.

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Puzzle Number

693

Date

2026-03-24

LinkedIn Pinpoint 693 Clues & Answer
Pinpoint 693 Clues:

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

#1
Mahalo
#2
Danke
#3
Arigato
#4
Merci
#5
Gracias
Pinpoint 693 Answer:
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🌍 LinkedIn Pinpoint 693 Answer — Mahalo, Danke, Arigato, Merci, Gracias

Published: March 24, 2026 · Answer: "Thank you" in different languages

Five words, zero English — that's a clear signal something cross-linguistic is happening here.

I started with Merci and Gracias. French and Spanish "thank you" — that's a pattern right there. But I held off on committing, because coincidences happen.

Then Danke showed up. German. And suddenly this wasn't a coincidence anymore.

Arigato confirmed it — Japanese "thank you," recognizable to anyone who's watched anime or traveled to Japan. At that point I had four languages and one category locked in my mind.

Mahalo was the last piece. Hawaiian. Less globally common than the others, but still widely known from tourism and surf culture. The full set clicked: five different ways to say the same thing in five different languages.

What I liked about this puzzle is how it tests vocabulary breadth across cultures rather than wordplay or hidden patterns. There's no trick — it's just "do you know how to say thank you in these languages?" If you've traveled or picked up bits of other cultures, this one falls quickly.

✅ Pinpoint 693 Answer

"Thank you" in different languages

ClueLanguagePronunciation Guide
MahaloHawaiianmah-HAH-loh
DankeGermanDAHN-keh
ArigatoJapaneseah-ree-GAH-toh
MerciFrenchmair-SEE
GraciasSpanishGRAH-see-ahs

💡 What This Puzzle Teaches

Recognize cross-linguistic patterns early. When you see multiple foreign-looking words with no obvious English connection, ask yourself: could these all be the same word in different languages? Two examples confirm a theory; three locks it in.

Global vocabulary pays off. This puzzle rewards people who've traveled, studied languages, or simply consumed media from other cultures. Mahalo is the trickiest — it's not in most basic language courses — but Hawaiian is culturally present enough in the US that most people have encountered it.

Commit when the pattern is clear. By the time I had Danke, Merci, and Gracias, I didn't need Arigato and Mahalo to confirm. Learning to trust partial evidence — while staying open to revision — is a core Pinpoint skill.


FAQ

Q1: What is the answer to LinkedIn Pinpoint 693? The answer is "Thank you" in different languages. The five clues — Mahalo (Hawaiian), Danke (German), Arigato (Japanese), Merci (French), and Gracias (Spanish) — are all ways to say "thank you" across different world languages.

Q2: What does "Mahalo" mean? Mahalo is the Hawaiian word for "thank you." It's deeply embedded in Hawaiian culture and is widely recognized internationally, especially in the context of tourism and aloha spirit. You'll see it on signs, hear it from locals, and encounter it in Hawaiian music and media. It can also carry broader meanings of gratitude, admiration, and respect beyond a simple "thanks."

Q3: How do you pronounce "Arigato"? Arigato (ありがとう) is pronounced ah-ree-GAH-toh in Japanese. The more formal version is "Arigatou gozaimasu" (ah-ree-GAH-toh go-ZAI-mahss), which is used in polite or business settings. The casual "arigato" is fine among friends. It's one of the first words people pick up from Japanese culture, appearing everywhere from anime to travel guides.

Q4: Is "Danke" the only way to say thank you in German? Danke is the everyday standard, but German has several levels of thanks. "Danke schön" means "thank you very much" (literally "thank you beautifully"), while "Vielen Dank" is another formal option meaning "many thanks." In casual speech, Germans also say "Danke dir" (thanks to you) or simply "Dankeschön" as one word. Danke alone covers most everyday situations.

Q5: How do I get better at Pinpoint puzzles with foreign words? The key is pattern recognition. When you see unfamiliar words that don't look like English, consider whether they might all belong to the same category — same word in different languages, terms from a specific culture, loanwords from a single language. Start by identifying what languages the words come from, then ask what common meaning they might share. Broad cultural exposure and language learning both help here.


Want more answers? Check out the full LinkedIn Pinpoint Answer archive.

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