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Ten finalists to compete for national spelling bee title

Thursday night the top ten finalists in the Scripps National Spelling Bee will compete for the coveted winning title. 

Ten spellers advancing to the finals of the 2015 Scripps National Spelling Bee, stand on stage together.

Andrew Harnik/AP

May 28, 2015

Just 10 finalists remain in the 2015 Scripps National Spelling Bee, down from the 285 who traveled to the Washington, D.C., area earlier this week to participate in the 90-year-old contest. The young spellers have come from across the country (and some from overseas), represent diverse cultural backgrounds, and range in age from nine to 15.聽

With plenty of high-pressure moments and words like聽to tackle,聽the contestants are facing challenges that most adults would consider fearsome. But the young spellers tend to be an ambitious lot and some hope that a win in the spelling bee will be a step toward acceptance at a prestigious college. In their , many of the contestants say they dream of going to schools like Harvard, MIT, and Stanford.

Most of the students are already academic standouts. This year, 117 of the original 285 contestants speak more than one language and the majority say that math is their favorite subject in school.

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Tejas Muthusamy, speller number 264 and a top ten finalist, has a biography that says, "His varied interests will undoubtedly help to lead him to his dream school, Harvard University, where he hopes to study biology or public policy."聽Tejas is in the sixth grade.

Many of the spelling bee champions have gone on to academic and professional success after winning the bee.

Ned Andrews took the championship in 1994 when he was only 13 years old. He went on to attend Yale University and later, University of Virginia's Law School, as reported by . Andrews also wrote a book titled 聽where he dishes out the need-to-know tactics and strategies for spelling bee victory.聽

Other winners have studied biochemistry, gone on to be nurses and surgeons, and attended Ivy League schools. 聽

The contest has always been challenging but a glance at , starting from the competition's conception in 1925 and continuing all the way to the most recent spelling bee in 2014 makes it clear that the bee has become more difficult in recent years.

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In 1932, for example, the winning word was "knack." In 2011 it was "cymotrichous." The silent "k" in knack makes it tricky, but cymotrichous presents a challenge on a completely different level. Most adults probably wouldn鈥檛 even know what the word means, much less be able to spell it. 聽

In 2012 it was "guetapens," in 2013 the word was "knaidel," and in 2014聽Ansun Sujoe and聽Sriram Hathwar were both crowned champion by聽correctly spelling "feuilleton" and "stichomythia," respectively.聽

The 2014 winners were both Indian American, continuing a seven-year streak of Indian American champions and sparking some degree of national controversy. like聽鈥淭he kids in the spelling bee should only be AMERICAN鈥 and聽鈥淣o American sounding names who won the spelling B. #sad#fail鈥 were common.聽

However, Paige Kimble, the bee's director, told that Indian American contestants have long exhibited a "commitment to pursue the spelling bee over many years," resulting in major success.

Tonight, the spellers put their months of hard work to the test. Whether veterans or new-comers, all face a high-stakes contest being watched around the world.

Dev Jaiswal, a 13-year old from聽Louisville, Miss., has returned for his second聽national spelling bee.

"It's very exciting, especially when you get a word you've never heard of before," . "It's always scary when that happens."