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Sixth grader Ananya Vinay from California wins Spelling Bee; Indians rule

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Washington, DC
Ananya Vinay, 12, sixth grader from Fresno, California, won the Scripps National Spelling Bee defeating contestants older than her. She correctly spelled "marocain," which is a dress fabric that is made with a warp of silk or rayon and a filling of other yarns.
Second place went to Rohan Rajeev, 14, eight grader from Edmond, Oklahoma and third place went to Shourav Dasari from Spring Texas.
The first place winner will receive $40,000, while the second place winner will get $30,000 and third prize winner gets $20,000. There are prizes for all finalists also.
When the finals started there were 20 contestants. After a while six remained and all of them were Indian Americans. Since 2008, Indians are reigning in the spelling bee contest.
The finals continued for a long time till around 11:30 pm. The children seemed very tired and sleepy. 

Ananya said she knew every word she got in the Bee, according to the blog page of Scripps Spelling Bee. That's after finishing quickly last year - she was eliminated on multivalent, and tied for 172nd place in her first appearance at the Bee.

"It was kind of intense," she said of 21 rounds of head-to-head competition with Rohan Rajeev, speller 235 and an Oklahoma eighth grader in his first Bee.

Ananya said she's studied a ton since last year's defeat. 

Her father, Vinay Sreekumar, said Ananya is highly self-motivated.

"I'm really excited and happy to see she won. She deserved it," he said. "It's not a surprise for me. She worked hard for it."

Ananya had two more years of eligibility, but she wanted to get it done this year, her dad said.

"She came here to win and she knew she could do it," he said.

Anu Poliyedath, Anaya's mother, said her daughter has a passion for spelling.

Ananya's grandmother came from India to watch, and family was texting from India. A group of friends was also watching in California, at their home theater. They DVRed the Bee so Ananya and her family can watch it later, and they, too, texted support.

"I'm proud she was so confident," Anu said.

Ananya's favorite word is spizzerinctum, which means ambition to succeed.

“It motivates me,” she said. “I hope I get a word I know and I just keep going."

Ananya likes to volunteer because she likes to help people. She’d like to be a doctor, scientist or a writer, and she likes reading mythology and adventure stories.

“I like finding stories behind words, investigating them further,” she said.

One of her favorites is Philomel, a word that means nightingale. It comes from the tale of a princess who was turned into a nightingale.

Ananya said she thought the words she got were easy ones. And she suggested others might want to start spelling, too.

"Just get started," she said. "It's really fun." 

"It's like a dream come true, I'm so happy right now," said Ananya Vinay. "It was interesting to go back and forth for so many rounds."

Rohan Rajeev’s sister, Raina, taught him the alphabet when he was two, he said. As a child, she was diagnosed with generalized dystonia.

Because of that, he wants to be a neurologist. Raina is watching at home, as is Rohan’s mother.

“She’s been my motivation,” he said.

The past three Bees have ended in a tie, including the 2016 edition, a competition held after officials changed the rules in an attempt to discourage such results. Nihar Janga and Jairam Hathwar shared last year’s title.