Schools
Journey Ends For 2 Huntington Beach Spelling Bee Contestants
Avid reading is attributed to the success of the Huntington Beach students who have made it to the round of 74 in the national competition.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA — Two Orange County contestants and reached 43rd place in a 16-way tie finishing their run for the National Spelling Bee. Together, with a contestant from Tarzana, they were the remaining California competitors from the original field of 207.
Baominh Le and Sophia Lin, both from Orange County, each incorrectly answered their fifth-round word meaning questions to finish in a 16-way tie for 43rd place.
Tarzana-based Irene Thomas misspelled her fourth-round word, clinquant, an adjective meaning glittering with gold or tinsel, and finished in a 17-way tie for 59th.
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Baominh incorrectly answered the question, "What does it mean to circumambulate?" The correct answer is to walk around. Sophia incorrectly answered the question "Scansion is:" The correct answer is the analysis of a rhythmic structure.
Both both began Tuesday's competition by correctly spelling their fourth-round words.
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Baominh correctly spelled swelldom, a noun meaning people of rank and fashion, while Sophia correctly spelled Waldhorn, a noun for a musical horn.
The two Orange County spellers — Baominh Le and Sophia Lin — both graduated Thursday from The Pegasus School, a private, pre-kindergarten through eighth-grade school in Huntington Beach that had 583 students in the just-completed school year.
James Swiger, the school's middle school director, attributed both Baominh and Sophia's spelling bee success to being avid readers.
Baominh is "always energetic," Swiger said.
"It's a sight to behold when he gets excited about a topic," Swiger said. "Baominh is one who revels in learning and academics."
Swiger said "Baominh has a warm and kind spirit. He's always ready to offer a helping hand, and enjoys engaging in good conversation."
Swiger described Sophia as "an incredibly hardworking scholar who doesn't leave anything on the table."
"When class starts, she's prepared to make the most of the experience, ask questions, and dive deep into understanding," Swiger said.
Sophia is "confident in herself and not afraid to use her voice when needed but she's also one who offers a warm smile to everyone and is a good friend," Swiger said.
Swiger called Sophia "a driven scholar and a unique young lady."
"She will be a mover and a shaker in the days to come," Swiger said.
In the previous round, Saturday, Baominh's first word was meiosis, the process of cell division in sexually reproducing organisms that reduces the number of chromosomes from diploid to haploid. He then chose the correct definition for stamina, staying power.
Baominh's final word of the day was gallowglass, the mercenary warrior elite among Gaelic-Norse clans residing in the Western Isles of Scotland and Scottish Highlands from the mid-13th century to the end of the 16th century.
Sophia first correctly spelled scintillation, a flash of light produced in a phosphor by absorption of an ionizing particle or photon. She correctly defined oblique as slanting in direction or position.
Sophia's final word to spell Saturday was copestone, the highest point, as of achievement.
Irene Thomas of Tarzana began Saturday's preliminaries by correctly spelling diapason, a noun meaning a full, rich outpouring of harmonious sound. She then correctly answered the word meaning question, "Something metatarsal is?" by choosing "relating to the part of the foot that forms the instep"
In the third round, she correctly spelled torero, a noun meaning a matador or one of the supporting team.
Irene was nonplussed by the words she encountered, she said by email, "They were mediocre. I think the more words you encounter and patterns you notice, the easier spelling and defining will be."
Irene said she had seen diapason and metatarsal in the word list bee organizers had provided her, but not torero.
"I had heard of similar words of Spanish origin, so I pieced it together," Irene said.
The quarterfinals will consist of three rounds and be completed one round at a time.
"Based on the preliminary words, some words will be challenging for sure," Irene said.
The second round of each level of the competition— the preliminaries, quarterfinals, semifinals and finals — will be a word meaning round, requiring the speller to orally select the correct multiple choice answer to a vocabulary question read by the pronouncer.
Irene graduated Friday from eighth grade at the Sherman Oaks Center for Enriched Studies, a fourth- through 12th-grade magnet school in Tarzana. It kept its original name after moving to the site of the former Sequoia Junior High School in 1980.
Saturday's preliminaries consisted of three rounds of oral competition, which took 11 1/2 hours to complete. There were 69 spellers who misspelled their first-round word, reducing the field to 138.
The field was further cut to 110 after the second round and 74 after the third.
All spellers spelling both words correctly and correctly answering the word meaning question will advance to the semifinals, which will be held June 27.
All competition through the semifinals will be held on a virtual basis. The top 10-12 finalists will travel to the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex near Orlando, Florida, for the finals, which will be held July 8.
No one from Orange County or Los Angeles County has won the National Spelling Bee.
City News Service, Patch Editor Ashley Ludwig contributed to this report.
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