Amal Augustine
Founder, Spelling Better
Amal Augustine is the founder of Spelling Better, an innovative learning app designed to help students improve their spelling, vocabulary, and language skills through interactive and engaging methods.
He graduated from St. Stephen’s College, University of Delhi and is currently pursuing his Master’s degree at National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan, focusing on research and technology-driven learning.
A quiz enthusiast, Amal has won 50+ national-level quiz competitions. He enjoys reading science journals, programming, and exploring Computer Science innovations. Through Spelling Better, he aims to make vocabulary learning simple, enjoyable, and meaningful.
Today’s Puzzle: A Flowing Letter Set Leading to ABANDONING
Today’s NYT Spelling Bee puzzle delivered a rich and rewarding challenge with a strong mix of vowels and consonants. With the center letter D and outer letters A, I, B, N, G, O, the puzzle immediately hinted at the possibility of longer, flowing words and layered constructions. As it turned out, today’s solution was deeply satisfying, leading to a powerful pangram: ABANDONING.
Today’s Letters
This is a highly flexible letter set. It includes:
Such a combination usually signals that longer words and progressive word-building strategies will be effective.
Letter Hive
Every valid word must include the center letter D, so using it as the anchor keeps the solving process focused and efficient.
How I Solved Today’s Puzzle
Starting with 4-Letter Words
I began by identifying simple four-letter words to build momentum and understand the puzzle’s natural patterns.
Expanding to 5-Letter Words
Next, I built on those foundations and tested smoother, more flowing combinations.
Finding a Strong Root
While experimenting with combinations, I came across abandon. This became the key turning point.
Extending the Word
Once abandon was identified, the next logical move was to test a natural ending.
The Breakthrough Moment
The discovery of abandon changed the direction of the puzzle. It used most of the available letters and clearly invited an extension.
Adding -ing created abandoning, a complete and natural word that used every letter in the hive.
This made the solve feel especially rewarding because the pangram emerged from a clear word-building path rather than a random guess.
Why today’s puzzle felt satisfying
Today’s puzzle had a smooth solving rhythm. Short words revealed useful patterns, mid-length words confirmed the letter flow, and the root word abandon opened the door to the final pangram.
The presence of -ing also made the puzzle feel natural, because it gave players a familiar way to extend a strong base word into a longer and more complete answer.
Finding the Pangram
The word ABANDONING uses all seven letters from today’s puzzle:
It fits perfectly within the puzzle constraints and represents a classic Spelling Bee pangram—built from a strong root word with a natural suffix.
Pangram of the Day
Meaning: The act of leaving something behind or giving something up completely.
This pangram stands out because:
- It uses all the letters
- It is a common and natural word
- It emerges logically from a base word, abandon
Full Word List
Here are the valid words from today’s puzzle, starting from 4-letter words.
4-Letter Words
5-Letter Words
6-Letter Words
7-Letter Words
8+ Letter Words
Strategy Tips from Today’s Puzzle
Focus on the Center Letter
Ensuring every word contained D helped maintain efficiency and avoid invalid guesses.
Build from Strong Roots
Identifying abandon early made it much easier to reach the pangram and unlock longer words.
Look for Common Suffixes
The -ing ending was key today. Many Spelling Bee puzzles rely on such common and flexible endings.
Expand Gradually
Instead of guessing long words randomly, build step by step:
This structured approach is far more effective and reliable.
Watch for Repeating Letters
Today’s pangram includes repeating letters like A and N, a common feature in longer words that should not be overlooked.
Puzzle Reflection
The April 24, 2026 puzzle was a great example of how a well-balanced letter set can create a smooth and rewarding solving experience. It encouraged:
- Logical progression
- Recognition of base words
- Strategic use of suffixes
The pangram “abandoning” felt natural and satisfying to discover, making the puzzle enjoyable from start to finish.
Takeaway from Today’s Puzzle
Today’s NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was both engaging and rewarding. If you identified abandon early, reaching abandoning would have felt like a natural progression.
This puzzle highlights an important lesson: the key to solving often lies in recognizing strong base words and building upon them logically.
If you found the pangram, it reflects excellent pattern recognition and vocabulary skills. If not, reviewing these steps will help you improve in future puzzles.
Each puzzle is another opportunity to refine your word-building strategy and deepen your understanding of language.