‘Well, This Is Surprising’: Top Moments From the National Spelling Bee

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Faizan Zaki, last year’s runner-up, won the coveted award after surviving two dramatic final rounds and calling the pronouncer, “bro.”

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Faizan Zaki Wins Spelling Bee

The 13-year-old champion dropped to the floor after correctly spelling the word “éclaircissement,” taking home the Scripps National Spelling Bee trophy.

Your word is éclaircissement. Éclaircissement. E-C-L-A-I-R-C I-S-S-E-M-E-N-T. Éclaircissement. That is correct. Faizan Zaki, you are the 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee champion. Somebody peel him off the floor. We have a winner. A champion. And Scripps C.E.O. Adam Symson will now present the trophy to Faizan. Faizan Zaki, you are the 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee champion. And on behalf of the E.W. Scripps Company, I’m pleased, really pleased, to present to you with the Scripps Cup.

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The 13-year-old champion dropped to the floor after correctly spelling the word “éclaircissement,” taking home the Scripps National Spelling Bee trophy.CreditCredit...Ting Shen for The New York Times

Talya Minsberg

May 30, 2025Updated 9:13 a.m. ET

After coming in as runner-up during last year’s Scripps National Spelling Bee and bungling an earlier chance to win on Thursday night, Faizan Zaki was given a word that, if spelled correctly, would let him finally win it all: “éclaircissement.”

He smiled and, without hesitation, stated each letter easily, then collapsed on the floor amid a shower of confetti. The 13-year-old of Plano, Texas, didn’t even need to ask for the word’s meaning, “a clearing up of something obscure.”

The stunning win capped a surprising run that took down six finalists and momentarily left the bee’s winner in doubt.

Here are five takeaways from the competition.

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Nine children sit on black chairs in front of a purple backdrop with a beehive pattern.
The nine finalists onstage during the Scripps National Spelling Bee.Credit...Ting Shen for The New York Times

None of the nine finalists were eliminated in the first round as they easily tackled words like “isopag,” “ethology” and “Politique.” The vocabulary round took out the first finalist, Akshaj Somisetty, 13, of Harrisburg, Pa., after he incorrectly defined “imbroglio.”

In the third round, Esha Marupudi, 13, of Phoenix, was eliminated after misspelling “aromorphosis,” and Oliver Halkett, 13, of Los Angeles, was out after struggling with the word “aurore.”


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