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https://scmp.com/news/world/united-states-canada/article/2148810/sound-telyn-champion-triturates-rivals-us-spelling
World/ United States & Canada

Sound the telyn! Champion triturates rivals at US spelling bee, as glossodynia overcomes veteran pronouncer

Karthik Nemmani, 14, is crowned the top speller in the US, with the winning word ‘koinonia’

Karthik Nemmani, 14, is crowned the top speller in the US, with the winning word ‘koinonia’

Karthik Nemmani of McKinney, Texas, was declared champion of the 2018 Scripps US National Spelling Bee on Thursday night, winning on the word “koinonia.”

In doing so, the 14-year-old emerged the top speller from a record-shattering 515 contestants at the national bee, compared with 291 last year, after organisers expanded eligibility.

Along the way, he had to outlast a field of 16 finalists who vanquished words such as “Praxitelean” (a style of sculpture) “ispaghul” (fibre derived from a type of seed) and “telyn” (a Celtic harp) in a breathtaking show of spelling skill broadcast live on ESPN.

Nemmani also continued a long-time trend by becoming the 14th champion or co-champion of South Asian descent the bee has had in 11 consecutive years.

In this combination of photos, students compete in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Maryland. Photo: AP
In this combination of photos, students compete in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Maryland. Photo: AP

The 16 finalists took the stage at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in Maryland to battle it out for the title of champion. The competition was, in a word, brutal. In the first round of ESPN-televised spelling Thursday night, nearly half of the finalists misspelled their words, including several crowd favourites such as Tara Singh, a 13-year-old from Kentucky who was competing at her fifth and final national bee.

To even get to that point, the finalists had to survive nearly five hours of onstage spelling that started Thursday morning. Bee officials said the plan had been to whittle down the field to about a dozen contestants for the prime-time competition. It would take five rounds of onstage spelling to get to 16, the largest group ever to head into the championship finals.

The 16 finalists ranged in age from 11 to 14 and included nine girls and seven boys. The spellers came from all over the United States, plus one from Canada. And several had appeared at the national bee in previous years.
Charles Millard, 13, from Frederick, Maryland, misspells a word during the second round of the bee. Photo: AP
Charles Millard, 13, from Frederick, Maryland, misspells a word during the second round of the bee. Photo: AP
Sophia Clark, 11, from White Marsh, Maryland, misspells during the second round of thebee. Photo: AP
Sophia Clark, 11, from White Marsh, Maryland, misspells during the second round of thebee. Photo: AP
“I just try not to think about it,” said Naysa Modi, a 12-year-old from Texas, competing in her fourth national bee, when asked about whether she might be a favourite to win this year. “That’s too much pressure.”

Thursday had begun with 41 spellers who qualified for the finals after surviving what was arguably the most intense competition in the bee’s 93-year history.

This year more spellers qualified because of a new invitational programme called “RSVBee,” which allows those who didn’t win a regional or state bee to still apply for the nationals if they had won their school bee or been a former national finalist.

The massive field of spellers began competing in earnest Tuesday by taking a written test so difficult that there were no perfect scores this year.
Simone Kaplan, from Miami, Florida, dances off stage after incorrectly spelling carmagnole during the final round of the bee. Photo: EPA
Simone Kaplan, from Miami, Florida, dances off stage after incorrectly spelling carmagnole during the final round of the bee. Photo: EPA
Sravanth Malla, from Thiells, New York, is eliminated during the final round of the bee. Photo: EPA
Sravanth Malla, from Thiells, New York, is eliminated during the final round of the bee. Photo: EPA
Of note, however: All five spellers who scored the highest on the test were among the 16 finalists. That included Naysa and Nemmani; 14-year-old Sravanth Malla of New York; 12-year-old Shruthika Padhy of New Jersey; and 12-year-old Aisha Randhawa of California.

The expanded field also forced several logistical changes, such as an extra day of onstage spelling this week.

For hours on Tuesday and Wednesday, the spellers, who ranged in age from 8 to 14, tackled hundreds of mind-bending words, including “glossodynia” (a pain in the tongue), “stolon” (a horizontal branch from the base of a plant that produces new plants from buds at its tip or nodes) and “triturate” (to crush or grind).
Adom Appiah of Spartanburg, South Carolina, misspells his word at the Bee on Wednesday. Photo: Washington Post
Adom Appiah of Spartanburg, South Carolina, misspells his word at the Bee on Wednesday. Photo: Washington Post
Tara Singh (centre, in glasses) is comforted by friends and supporters after she misspelled the word 'vinhatico' during the final rounds of the bee. Photo: Agence France-Presse
Tara Singh (centre, in glasses) is comforted by friends and supporters after she misspelled the word 'vinhatico' during the final rounds of the bee. Photo: Agence France-Presse
The additional day of spelling meant that Jacques Bailly, the bee’s long-time pronouncer – who is treated with almost iconic reverence by the spellers – took breaks for the first time to preserve his voice, handing over the microphone to associate pronouncer Brian Sietsema for a couple of the preliminary rounds.

It was hard for him to pull back, Bailly said Wednesday.

“I would probably run myself into the ground doing this, because I just love doing it,” he said. “But I recognise with three days that I’ve got to do some pacing, to make sure I’m really on my game and we have full attention for every speller on there.”

Naysa Modi (left) and Karthik Nemmani, both from Texas, are the last two competitors in the 91st Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday. Photo: Agence France-Presse
Naysa Modi (left) and Karthik Nemmani, both from Texas, are the last two competitors in the 91st Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday. Photo: Agence France-Presse
Karthik Nemmani, 14, from McKinney, Texas, smiles after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday. Photo: AP
Karthik Nemmani, 14, from McKinney, Texas, smiles after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday. Photo: AP
On Wednesday night, bee officials used test scores to determine that 41 spellers would move on to the finals, to compete under the glaring lights of prime-time television. (Bee rules state that no more than 50 contestants can advance to the finals.) The new wild-card programme paid off for a number of spellers: Of the 41 finalists, 16 had qualified through RSVBee, and four of those contestants moved on to the prime-time finals.

Oh, and the meaning of that winning word, koinonia? It’s a term for the communion between fellow Christians, or with God.