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‘Knaidel’ wins Scripps National Spelling Bee

Posted at 8:41 PM, May 30, 2013
and last updated 2013-05-30 23:01:33-04

(CNN) — Arvind Mahankali, a 13-year-old eighth-grader from Bayside Hills, New York, won the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday, correctly spelling the word “knaidel.”

“It means that I am retiring on a good note,” said Mahankali, who attends Nathaniel Hawthorne Middle School 74. “I shall spend the summer studying physics.”

Mahankali, who wants to become a physicist, had finished third in the two previous national bees, being eliminated after misspelling words with German roots.

“I thought that the German curse had turned into a German blessing,” he said, when asked what he thought when he heard the final word, a German-derived Yiddish word for a type of dumpling.

Pranav Sivakumar, a 13-year-old from Tower Lakes, Illinois, finished second.

Bountiful resident Vismaya Kharkar tied for fifth place in the competition. The 14-year-old is an eighth-grader at Challenger School in Salt Lake City. This year’s Bee is her third consecutive appearance, and she improved upon last year’s tenth place finish.

Vismaya misspelled “paryphodrome,” an adjective meaning “having a vein that closely follows the margin.”

The annual contest offers the winner a healthy dose of classroom cred, $32,500 in cash and savings bonds, a trophy and a library of reference materials.

Eleven million schoolchildren participated in preliminaries leading up to the national contest this week. Of those, 281 children made the trip to Oxon Hill, Maryland, just outside Washington, for the national bee. Eleven spellers made it through to the finals.

Among them were 63 children who had been to at least one national bee before, and had to prepare for some changes in the rules for this year’s events.

For the first time, participants had to demonstrate proficiency in vocabulary in addition to spelling.

Organizers also added an additional computer test for the semifinals, imposed time limits on computer-based spelling and vocabulary tests and added a rule that resulted in automatic elimination for any participant who misspelled a word on stage in the second or third rounds.

CNN’s Athena Jones and Mike Pearson contributed to this report.
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