how i thought those words are spelled: inizym konjina mallepropou galenicious dresanch kloyng snaffeau esurient (i guessed that one. just believe me lol) sloose doggerel (same as esurient) ordinance seralleu
No, I was also in the Spelling Bee, all they do is they give you at least 3 pages back to back and you just have to *revise* the words and not learn them
hey meghna...if you wana participate...you must first give spell bee stage 1 exam from your school...if you get selected...then you get to attempt stage 2...then this is the final round...btw...where are you from..?
@@darshaksanghavi1369 tq so much.....but im from banglore.....and sry im going to college .....and i thought it may be college students....sory i dnt knw its 1ly fr scholl students.....tq soooooooooo much for ur repl......bro......
To be very honest the meanings,parts of speech are just not needed to spell a word.Origin might be needed in some cases but usage in a sentence is really neccessary. Who else think that the host tried her best to make the last boy go wrong so that they all can tie?That isn't fair.He verified the word "Ordinance" twice and the girl swayed her cunning head twice .He should have scored the highest.Nevertheless,politics will always be in every part of life......
@@headmasterzppsvhoti0169 Most of the time that origin is Latin or Greek. Those two languages make up 60% of English, says Vinay. When you know a word is Latinate, you know to look out for doubled consonants near the beginning of the word. Italian, the modern language closest to Latin, also uses double letters; Vinay loves the word cappuccino. French comes with surprising silent letters, like the t in escargot, or the z in assoilzie, a word meaning “absolve or acquit” that went from French to Scottish to English while still sounding like a French word: “ah-soil-ee.” German has its own quirks: A sh sound in a germanic word might be spelled sch, and German is behind English’s infuriating “I before E” rules: In German, ie and ei always mean two different sounds. One helpful mnemonic (which we didn’t get from 13-year-old Vinay) is that wein rhymes with wine, and bier is just like beer. English words with Asian origins are mercifully phonetic, as are Spanish words. Some anglicized vowel sounds might trip you up, but you’re less likely to run into silent letters Hope this info from google helpsss
why does the students ask to you about the word -- parts of speech, definition,use in a sentence, language of origin for spell the word. Mam please tell