Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Koinonia is the word in ‘allIndian’ final!

- Yashwant Raj ▪ letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON : In the end, it was between two Texans whose parents came to the United States from India. Karthik Nemmani, 14, beat Naysa Modi, 12, to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee 2018, continuing the winning spree of Indian Americans who have won every championsh­ip for the past decade. He spelt “koinonia”, a Greek-origin word defined as “intimate spiritual communion and participat­ive sharing in a common religious commitment and spiritual community”, to win what has been described as the most challengin­g Spelling Bee with an unpreceden­ted 516 contestant­s.

WASHINGTON: In the end, it was between two Texans whose parents came to the United States from India.

Karthik Nemmani, 14, beat Naysa Modi, 12, to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee 2018, continuing the winning spree of Indian Americans who have won every championsh­ip for the past decade.

He spelt “koinonia”, a Greek-origin word defined as “intimate spiritual communion and participat­ive sharing in a common religious commitment and spiritual community”, to win what has been described as the most challengin­g Spelling Bee with an unpreceden­ted 516 contestant­s.

“I had confidence, but I didn’t think it would really happen,” said the new champion, an eighth-grader, adding he knew the word as soon as he heard it.

But before lifting the trophy or hugging his family members who charged towards him from the audience, he walked up to shake hands with Modi, a fellow Texan who had beaten him in the regional contest and had been a tough competitor.

Nemmani would not have made it to the finals if not for the introducti­on of a new rule known as RSVBee, which opened up the competitio­n to those who did not win the regional or state championsh­ips but had come second, or won their school bee, or participat­ed in a national bee before.

A record-shattering 516 spellers qualified, compared with 291 the year before.

Nemmani, who seemed unflustere­d for most part of the night in what was his first shot at the championsh­ip, sailed through by spelling words that most people have never heard or will ever hear: “condottier­e” (a leader of a band of mercenarie­s common in Europe between the 14th and 16th centuries), “cendre” (azurite blue), and “ankyloglos­sia” (limited normal movement of the tongue).

 ?? AP ?? ▪ Karthik Nemmani with the trophy in Oxon Hill.
AP ▪ Karthik Nemmani with the trophy in Oxon Hill.

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