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Az teen on to National Spelling Bee semifinals
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Az teen on to National Spelling Bee semifinals

  • Goodyear student Sumaita Mulk, 13, reacts after learing that she had advanced to the group of 50 students who will compete in the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
    Meghan McCarthy/Cronkite News ServiceGoodyear student Sumaita Mulk, 13, reacts after learing that she had advanced to the group of 50 students who will compete in the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
  • Sumaita Mulk, 13, of Goodyear, and Aarish Raza, 13, of Chinle, look on during the second round of the Scripps National Spelling Bee competition in the Washington, D.C., area.
    Meghan McCarthy/Cronkite News ServiceSumaita Mulk, 13, of Goodyear, and Aarish Raza, 13, of Chinle, look on during the second round of the Scripps National Spelling Bee competition in the Washington, D.C., area.
  • Aarish Raza, 13, of Chinle, was one of two Arizona students competing in the three-day national bee against more than 270 others from across the country. Aarish won three bees in Arizona before advancing to the national level.
    Meghan McCarthy/Cronkite News ServiceAarish Raza, 13, of Chinle, was one of two Arizona students competing in the three-day national bee against more than 270 others from across the country. Aarish won three bees in Arizona before advancing to the national level.
  • Sumaita Mulk, who won the Arizona Spelling Bee, was competing for the first time this year at the national level when she went to the Scripps National Spelling Bee in the Washington area.
    Meghan McCarthy/Cronkite News ServiceSumaita Mulk, who won the Arizona Spelling Bee, was competing for the first time this year at the national level when she went to the Scripps National Spelling Bee in the Washington area.

A Goodyear teen advanced to the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee with 50 other spellers Wednesday, outlasting 228 students in the first three rounds of competition near Washington, D.C.

Sumaita Mulk, 13, correctly spelled the words “regale” and “zapateado” in the second and third rounds of the bee to move on.

“I was just like, ‘Yes!’” Sumaita said. “I’d had both words before, but the first is way more common.”

Another Arizona teen, Aarish Raza, of Chinle, won the Navajo Nation spelling bee to get to the national competition, but he was eliminated Wednesday evening.

Aarish, a seventh grader at Chinle Junior High, correctly spelled the words “vettura” and “alcazar” during Wednesday’s competition, but did not get enough words right in the first round to advance.

“All that are here are winners,” said Mohammad Raza, Aarish’s father. “Aarish did his best and that’s all we care about.”

It was the first appearance at the national bee for both Arizona teens, who said they practiced one to two hours a day in the months leading up to the competition.

The spellers were given a computer-based spelling test during Tuesday’s preliminary round in which they had to spell 50 words. Only 25 of those words counted toward their scores, however, and contestants did not know which counted and which did not. Bee officials had chosen the “score words” on a previous date.

First-round words were worth a point each and second- and third-round words were worth three each, for a total possible score of 31 points. That score determined who moved on to the semifinals.

Paige Kimble, director of the bee, told the crowd she believed this year’s competition was more difficult than last year’s. Whereas five children spelled all of their words correctly last year, only one did this year.

Sumaita was anxious about her chances of advancing after spelling 17 out of 25 first-round words correctly. She became more hopeful after correctly spelling her second- and third-round words: Regale, a Middle French word meaning to entertain sumptuously, and zapateado, a Spanish word for a flamenco dance marked with rhythmic stamping of the feet.

Sumaita, a seventh-grader at Gary K. Herberger Young Scholars Academy in Glendale, won her school, district and regional bees before winning the Arizona Spelling Bee in April and advancing to the nationals.

She said she spelled because at first her school required her to do so, but became more interested in spelling when she found out about the incentives, such as cash prizes and “being famous.”

Both she and Aarish said they are looking forward to a tour of Washington, D.C., that all the bee participants are invited to attend.

But first, Sumaita will compete in the semifinals Thursday morning. In that round, spellers are bounced as soon as they misspell a word. If Sumaita spells all her words correctly, she will advance to the finals Thursday night.

“I was so excited I didn’t even know what to do,” she said, after learning she was moving on.

Are you smarter than a Bee contestant?

A sample of words from the third round of the Scripps National Spelling Bee:

  • Celature (noun): The act or art of engraving or embossing.
  • Douane (noun): A customhouse.
  • Framboise (noun) A brandy or liqueur made from raspberries.
  • Gyascutus (noun): An imaginary large four-legged beast with legs on one side longer than on the other for walking on hillsides.
  • Imprimatur (noun): Approval of a publication under circumstances of official censorship.
  • Prosciutto (noun): Dry-cured spiced Italian ham, usually sliced thin,
  • Sauerbraten (noun): Oven-roasted or pot-roasted beef marinated before cooking in vinegar with peppercorns, garlic, onions and bay leaves.
  • Voiturette (noun): A carriage, wagon or other wheeled vehicle.
  • Whortleberry (noun): A bilberry or blueberry.
  • Zacate (noun): Dry weeds or grass; fodder, forage.
  • Zanzibari (noun): A native or inhabitant of Zanzibar.

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