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AAP
AAP
Politics
Daniel Trotta

Teen wins US National Spelling Bee with 'bromocriptine'

A 14-year-old eighth-grader from Rancho Cucamonga, California has won the Scripps National Spelling Bee in a spell-off, correctly spelling 32 words rapid-fire over 90 seconds to claim the competition's cash prize.

Shrey Parikh defeated Ishaan Gupta, a 12-year-old seventh-grader from Jersey City, New Jersey, who got 25 ‌words correct from the same list, after having been sequestered during Shrey's turn.

Both advanced to Thursday night's dramatic finale in the televised competition after they survived 18 rounds without misspelling a word on the final day. The eliminatory spell-off was introduced in ‌2021 after the ‌2019 competition ⁠ended with eight co-champions who kept spelling words correctly.

Event organisers ​said Shrey's winning word, from a long list of obscure selections, was "bromocriptine", which is "a polypeptide alkaloid that is a derivative of ergot and mimics the activity of dopamine," according to the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.

He advanced to the spell-off by nailing Philepitta, a genus of ⁠Madagascan birds, while Ishaan matched him ‌in ​the 18th round with Ertebolle - of or belonging to an Early Neolithic or ​Late Mesolithic culture in ‌the Baltic region.

The Scripps National Spelling Bee is one of the most well-known ​academic competitions in the United States, tracing its origins to 1925, when the Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper invited students to participate in a national spelling contest.

Over ​the ​decades, the spelling bee has ​evolved into a highly competitive event that draws ‌hundreds of participants from across the US and around the world.

Contestants qualify through a series of local and regional bees, spelling complex and obscure words, sometimes piecing together previously unknown words after learning the language of origin, pronunciation and definition.

Some 247 ​finalists, all aged 15 or younger, competed in the televised national competition over ​three days at ⁠the DAR Constitution Hall in Washington.

Shrey's effort won him $US50,000 ($A70,000).

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