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.
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 8th-grader Sukanya Roy of South Abington Township, Pennsylvania, who took home the trophy and the more than $40,000 in cash and prizes Thursday at the 84th Scripps National Spelling Bee.
“I went through the dictionary once or twice,” said Sukanya, who tied for 12th in 2009 and 20th in 2010, “and I guess some of the words really stuck.”
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.”
“They look up to that. But I don’t know how that impacted her,” said Sukanya’s farther, Abhijit Roy. “This is not something we pressurized her to do. She wanted to do this by herself, and we basically just helped her along. It’s a few years; this didn’t happened overnight.”
Laura Newcombe of Toronto was the runner-up. The 12-year-old was trying to become the first Canadian to win the bee, but she went out on the word “sorites.”
A video about the Spelling Bee is one of the top videos on the Internet today. View it and more top videos below:
Chinese boy sells kidney to buy iPad
A 17-year-old high school student from southern China sells one of his kidneys to buy an iPad and iPhone
Jaycee Dugard Addresses Kidnapper
The young woman says “I Hated Every Second of Every Day for 18 Years.”
Inside Nike’s research laboratory
The BBC is granted rare access to Nike’s research laboratory where the company is working with US gymnast Shawn Johnson.
Inside Kate Middleton’s childhood home
Estate agent Dudley Singleton shows the BBC’s Alison Harper around the home that Kate and Pippa Middleton grew up in.
_____
An Associated Press report was used in this video compilation.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: You Cannot Kill An Ideology With A Gun.
Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.





