Friday, June 1, 2018

Spelling Bee

What Sealed the Deal in Spelling Bee: 'Koinonia'

Wild card Karthik Nemmani wins Scripps National Spelling Bee

By Newser Editors and Wire Services

Naysa Modi, 12, from Frisco, Texas, smiles after she spells her word correctly during the finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Oxon Hill, Md., on Thursday.   (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

 Karthik Nemmani didn't win his regional spelling bee. He didn't even win his county spelling bee. But he was still good enough to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Throwing everything he had into his one shot at glory, 14-year-old Karthik outlasted better-known spellers on Thursday night and became the champion after a dramatically abrupt end to the competition, when 12-year-old Naysa Modi misspelled the word "Bewusstseinslage" in the first championship round.


Karthik had to spell two words correctly to seal the title, which he did with ease, and the lanky, soft-spoken Texan stepped back and smiled as he was showered with confetti. His winning word was "koinonia," which means Christian fellowship or communion.

Karthik is from McKinney, Texas, and Naysa lives in Frisco, Texas—both suburbs of Dallas—and Naysa topped Karthik at their county bee. "She's a really, really good speller. She deserved the trophy as much as I did," Karthik says. "I got lucky." He says there were eight or nine words during the prime-time finals he didn't know—a rare admission for a national champion. In the past, losing at the county level would have made Karthik ineligible for nationals, but he got in through a wild-card program that was instituted this year, the AP reports. Karthik, the 14th consecutive Indian-American champion, gets more than $40,000 in cash and prizes in addition to the trophy.

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