Some Spelling Bee puzzles give you a neat, single pangram to chase. Others—like today’s challenge—reward you twice. With A as the mandatory center letter and R, D, I, Y, O, N forming the outer ring, today’s hive delivered not just one but two full pangrams: ORDINARY and NONDAIRY.
In this breakdown, I’ll walk you through how I solved the puzzle step by step, how my pattern recognition developed as I explored the hive, and the complete word list I uncovered along the way.
First Look at the Hive
When I first saw today’s letters—A in the center, surrounded by R, D, I, Y, O, and N—my immediate instinct was that the puzzle had great potential. This letter set includes:
-
Two strong vowels (A, O)
-
A second vowel functioning as both vowel and consonant (Y)
-
High-utility consonants (R, N, D)
-
A smooth-flowing structure for building prefixes and suffixes
Right away, words like rain, road, raid, and yard popped into my mind. This usually signals a puzzle rich with word families—which is often a sign that pangrams might be hiding.
Warming Up with Short Words
As always, I started with the simple, foundational words. These “warm-up” words help build rhythm:
-
ran, rad, ray, and, nor, oar
-
yard, yarn, rain, roan, airy, aria, ado
-
road, raid, dairy, diary, dory, nary
At this stage, I was mostly exploring letter flow—checking which letters paired naturally and which combinations repeated. The A+r/n/d/y patterns were especially productive.
Spotting the First Pangram: ORDINARY
The first breakthrough came with the structure:
O + R + D + I + N + A + R + Y
The word ORDINARY fit perfectly:
-
Uses all seven outer letters
-
Includes the center letter A
-
Forms cleanly without forced constructions
Once that clicked, I was confident today’s grid contained at least one pangram—but the letter structure still felt like it offered more.

The Second Pangram Surprise: NONDAIRY
The real excitement came when I circled back to the letters N–O–N.
From there, the word built itself:
N + O + N + D + A + I + R + Y
The resulting word — NONDAIRY — was a perfect second pangram.
The realization actually came from the smaller word dairy, which naturally expanded into nondairy once I saw how the letters aligned.
Finding a second pangram is always satisfying, especially when both are common, recognizable words.
Here’s the complete set of words I identified from today’s hive:
Short Words (3–4 letters)
yard
yarn
airy
aria
rain
roan
road
raid
nary
dory
anon
arid
darn
dary
dyad
naan
nada
nana
rand
rani
roar
dairy
diary
adron
anion
annoy
ardor
array
daddy
dandy
dinar
drain
dryad
nadir
naiad
nanny
radar
radii
radio
radon
rainy
rando
randy
rayon
Medium & Long Words
ordain
nondairy
ordinary
arroyo
doodad
dorado
inroad
radian
andiron
android
noonday
dooryard
Pangrams
ORDINARY
NONDAIRY
Two pangrams in a single puzzle is always a treat, and today’s set delivered beautifully.

Final Thoughts
Today’s Spelling Bee puzzle was the perfect blend of approachable and challenging. The balance of vowels and consonants made the grid inviting, while the hidden dual-pangram structure made it deeply rewarding.
By starting with simple words, exploring common roots, and paying attention to how letters form natural expansions, both pangrams—ORDINARY and NONDAIRY—revealed themselves clearly.
Whether you’re chasing pangrams daily or sharpening your vocabulary, puzzles like today’s remind us why the Spelling Bee is so addictive: there’s always a moment of discovery waiting.
See you again tomorrow for another word adventure!