Welcome to the page with the answers to today's (January 6th 2022) clues of New York Times crossword.

Below is the list of all of today's clues (a total of 78 clues). Just click on a clue to get the answer.

Funny one
"Funny one!"
"Back to you"
Intellectual conformity ... or a hint to interpreting 17-, 22- and 51-Across
Compos mentis
Spill the beans
Some frills
Genre for Agatha Christie or Arthur Conan Doyle
Lay off
Detective Diaz on "Brooklyn Nine-Nine"
Like fans who hold season tickets, typically
Baby fox
Net emissions target
One reading Kerouac or Ginsberg, say
Like some relationships
Kissing on the subway, e.g., for short
Lively, in music: Abbr.
Sleazeball
"Wabbit" hunter Elmer
Birthstone after sapphire
Rapper ___ Nas X
One of two sultanates in the United Nations
Inside info
Right-hand page numbers, typically
Tiff
June
Garden item frequently added to cream cheese
Filled (with)
Brain connection
World's fair sight
Like scouting patches
Bit of Western neckwear
Great thing to feel like
___ ball
Items on a checklist
Signal agreement
Tums, for one
Actress Fisher of "Wedding Crashers"
One of two sultanates in the United Nations
Little bit of power
Country songs?
N.B.A. legend nicknamed "Black Mamba"
Funds might be held in this
End-of-week exclamation
Egg cells
Classic boulevard liners
Language of Pakistan's Daily Khabrain
U-shaped bike accessory
Boat going back and forth?
Top prize
Last word in an improv show
Would really rather not
"How do you like ___ apples?"
A rainbow is said to be a good one
x, y and sometimes z
Glass who shared the first-ever Pulitzer in Audio Journalism
Beseech
Romulus, Remus and the founding of Rome, e.g.
Language in which most words are monosyllabic
Word with high or seven
Jet-black gem
Mark of divinity
A G.I. may be seen in it
Reach for the stars
Cheers, boos and such
Like the eventual inheritors of the earth, in Matthew
No-frills
Strike down
Things might get swept up in it
+ or - thing
___ jeans
Brother
Go over
Early 19th-century Australia, for one
Boosts, redundantly
Water tower?
Time period, or an anagram of one?
Cup holder, usually