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OXON HILL, Maryland -- It went on and on and on. Five spellers who seemingly had memorized the entire dictionary simply could not be stumped with any word tossed their way. It was getting late, way past bedtime and well beyond the time slot allotted by ESPN for its telecast.
Sukanya Roy of South Abington Township, Pennsylvania, holds her trophy after winning the Scripps National Spelling Bee for spelling the word "cymotrichous", at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center at National Harbor, Maryland, June 2, 2011.[Photo/Agencies]
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Finally, after 21 consecutive spellings without a miss, one of them finally flubbed a word. Eventually, the others were gone, having heard the telltale bell of elimination, except for 14-year-old Indian-American eighth grader Sukanya Roy of South Abington Township, Pennsylvania, who took home the trophy and the more than $40,000 in cash and prizes at the 84th Scripps National Spelling Bee.
Sukanya's winning word was "cymotrichous," which relates to wavy hair. She likes hiking, rock climbing and ice skating, wants to travel and perhaps pursue a career in international relations. She is the fourth consecutive Indian-American to win the bee and the ninth in the last 13 years, a run that began when Nupur Lala captured the crown in 1999 and was later featured in the documentary "Spellbound."
A three-time competitor at the bee, Sukanya tied for 12th in 2009 and 20th in 2010.
"I went through the dictionary once or twice," she said, "and I guess some of the words really stuck."
Laura Newcombe of Toronto,the runner-up, spells a word in the semifinals of the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee contest at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, June 2, 2011.[Photo/Agencies] |
Thirteen spellers made the finals, an ever-growing chic-to-be-geek event that was broadcast in prime time for the sixth consecutive year. It was held at the National Harbor complex along the Potomac River, south of Washington.
Only one speller misfired in his first attempt: Samuel Estep of Berryville, Virginia, who couldn't handle "bondieuserie" and made the slow walk across the stage to receive a hug from his father.
The rounds kept getting tougher. Sriram Hathwar of Painted Post, New York, warmed everyone's hearts by greeting the audience with a "good evening" every time he stepped to the microphone, but he was ousted by the word "polatouche." Another Canadian, Veronica Penny, couldn't handle "rougeot" and made a ballerina-type wave as she walked away.
But then it came down to a final five that wouldn't give up. Sukanya, Laura, Dakota Jones of Las Vegas, Arvind Mahankali of New York and Joanna Ye of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, combined to spell everything - from "abhinaya" to "capoeira" to "cheongsam" to "opodeldoc" - through Rounds 11, 12, 13, 14 and into 15.
When Dakota finally misspelled "zanja" to break the string, he received a standing ovation. The remaining spellers got eight in a row before Arvind missed on "Jugendstil," which he initially and hilariously pronounced "You could steal." He also got a standing ovation and gave the crowd a salute. Everyone stood again for Joanna when she missed "galoubet."
The only two left were Sukanya and Laura. "Tired yet?" Laura asked the judges at one point.
But Sukanya couldn't be beat. She said she knew every word that was given to her - never having to guess - the result of her months of going through the dictionary twice from start to finish.
The bee continued to exhibit a sense of humor in the sentences used by pronouncer Jacques Bailly. He used a "set of prison bars for the name Bernie Madoff" in his example for "brachygraphy" in the semifinals and later made a reference to the "The Jeffersons," a sitcom that went off the air some 10 years before the oldest of the spellers was born. In the finals there was the ice-breaker: "The spellers' exsufflation at spelling the word correctly blew people's hair back in the front row."
The week began with 275 spellers. A written test Tuesday and two oral rounds Wednesday reduced the field for the semifinals.
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