OXON HILL, Md. — A four-letter word sent Shradha Rachamreddy to a third-place finish in last year's Scripps National Spelling Bee.
As the remaining spellers dwindled, Shradha was given ''orle,'' a heraldry term that means several small charges arranged to form a border within the edge of a field. It sounds exactly like ''oral.'' Shradha went with ''orel'' and heard the dreaded bell that signals a misspelled word.
''I overcomplicated it,'' Shradha said nearly a year later. ''It looks simple. It should have been simple, but I missed it.''
The good news for Shradha was that she nearly won it all as a seventh-grader, meaning she had one year of eligibility left. The 14-year-old from San Jose, California, returned as one of 245 spellers competing in this year's bee, which began with Tuesday's preliminary rounds at a convention center outside Washington, D.C.
Like other returning spellers, Shradha tried to learn from her mistake. She devoted part of her studying this year to the sorts of words she tends to miss.
''I did miss on a four-letter word, so my weakness tends to be those super short, tricky words, and I worked on compiling those into one list,'' Shradha said. ''I try to identify the words that seem likely to show up. If they're not spelled particularly the way they sound, then I'm like, ‘OK, it's fair game,' and I study that.''
Learning as many words as possible isn't a foolproof approach. No one in the nearly century-long history of the bee has been able to memorize the more than 500,000 words in Webster's Unabridged dictionary, any of which can be selected for inclusion by Scripps' word panel of former bee champions, linguists and other experts.
Last year's champion, Dev Shah, wrote in a Washington Post op-ed that to become a champion speller, you must accept that you'll be asked a word you don't know — and be calm enough to figure it out.