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San Diego 8th Grader Wins Scripps National Spelling Bee

Last updated on Friday, June 1, 2012

(SAN DIEGO, CA.) - Snigdha Nandipati, 14, won the Scripps National Spelling Bee on Thursday night by spelling “guetapens,” which means an ambush, snare or trap.

"This is a miracle," the eighth-grader from San Diego, California, told ESPN, which aired the contest. Asked what it had taken for her to reach the pinnacle of spelling prowess, she said, "A lot."

She said that properly spelling the winning word, which is derived from French, was not difficult. "I knew it," she said. "I'd seen it before."

In last year's spelling bee, she tied for 27th place.

Nandipati's victory in the 13th round came moments after her final challenger, Stuti Mishra, also 14 and from Orlando, Florida, stumbled over the spelling of "schwarmerei," which means excessive, unbridled enthusiasm or attachment.

Arvind Mahankali, a 12-year-old seventh-grader from New York City, came in third when he misspelled "schwannoma," a tumor of the sheath of a peripheral nerve.

According to a tweet from @ScrippsBee, Nandipati studied six hours per day. She was cheered on by her brother, her parents (her father coached her) and her grandparents, who had traveled from India to watch.

The contest was held in the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, outside Washington.

Nandipati wins $30,000 and an engraved trophy from Scripps, a $2,500 U.S. savings bond and reference library from Merriam-Webster, a $5,000 scholarship from the Sigma Phil Epsilon Educational Foundation and more than $2,600 in reference works from Encyclopaedia Brittanica.

This year's spelling bee saw the youngest contestant, 6-year-old Lori Anne Madison of Lake Ridge, Virginia. She spelled dirigible with aplomb, but was eliminated on Wednesday night when she misspelled "ingluvies," which is a pouch used by birds as a receptacle for food.

Nicholas Rushlow, a 14-year-old eighth-grader from Lancaster, Ohio, was eliminated when he misspelled "vetiver," an aeromatic grass whose especially fragrant root yields an oil used in perfumery and mats in India. Asked what was going through his mind when he heard the word, he said, "Oh, crap."

It was his fifth and final performance in the contest.

Asked what he was going to do with all the time he had previously devoted to spelling, he said, "I'm going to have to find a new hobby."

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