Can Wolfram solve these kind of "What do these words have in common" questions? For example given the words "Escape, Stall, Cradle, Press, Balance"; can it tell me that "They are all Wrestling Moves"?
More examples...
Q: Alchemy, Spell, Owl, Backstage, Mermaid, Squib, Scar, Usher, Gnome,
A: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
Q: Emergency, Soap, Bones, Drive
A: TV Shows
Q: Torch, Tubes, Flashlight
A: Spelunking
Q: Full, Green, Halfway, Light, Tree, Ware
A: They are all types of houses.
Q: Arduous, Knight, Dragon, Chest, Map
A: Quest
Q: Flower, Tern, Thirsty
A: Remove one letter from each word and they all spell a numeral.
Q: Common, Friend, Pastry, Portable, Remote, Varnish
A: If you take the "R" out, they still spell a word.
Q: Banana, Dresser, Grammar, Potato, Revive, Uneven, Assess
A: If you move the first letter to the end of the word, it forms the same word backwards. Banana = ananab, dresser = resserd, and so on.
Q: Boro Bow Fluff Know Pickup Scoff Shoe Taut
A: Rhyme with words that have different pronunciations of ough. Borough, bough, enough, dough, hiccough (hiccup), cough, through, bought.
Q: Bother, Favorite, Mistake, Pastry, Portable, Product
A: Each term contains two adjacent words if you allow the last letter of the first word to be the first letter of the last word. (i.e. bother = both + her; favorite = favor + rite; mistake = mist + take; pastry = past + try; portable = port + table; product = prod + duct)