Search on this blog

Search on this blog

About the Author

Amal Augustine

Founder, Spelling Better

50+ Quiz Wins Founder EdTech Builder Research Technology & Learning

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 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle came with a strong and rewarding letter set. The center letter was C, which meant every valid word had to include C. The outer letters were N, B, T, M, A, and O, creating a puzzle filled with bold consonant sounds, useful word roots, and two excellent pangrams.

The two pangrams for today are:

COMBATANT
NONCOMBATANT

Both words use all seven letters from the puzzle and give today’s challenge a powerful theme. The puzzle felt especially satisfying because the main pangrams are connected in meaning, making the solving journey feel logical and memorable.

Today’s Letters

Center Letter: C

Outer Letters: N, B, T, M, A, O

Pangrams: COMBATANT, NONCOMBATANT

C N B T M A O

How I Solved Today’s Puzzle

I started the puzzle by focusing on the center letter C. Since every valid Spelling Bee answer must contain the center letter, this helped narrow the possibilities immediately.

The first words that came to mind were shorter and more familiar ones like coat coma comb cocoa and taco. These simple words helped me understand the main patterns available in the grid. I noticed that the letters worked well with hard consonant sounds, especially combinations like co ca com and con.

From there, I started building longer words. The word combat appeared naturally because the letters C, O, M, B, A, and T were all available. Once I found combat, I looked for possible extensions. Adding -ant created combatant, which became the first pangram.

After finding COMBATANT, I continued testing prefixes. Since N and O were available, the prefix non- was possible. That led to the second and longer pangram: NONCOMBATANT. This was the most satisfying discovery of the puzzle because it extends directly from the first pangram and uses the available letters beautifully.

Pangram Breakdown

COMBATANT

A combatant is a person or group involved in fighting, conflict, or battle. In today’s puzzle, this word works perfectly because it uses every required letter:

C + O + M + B + A + T + A + N + T

It includes the center letter C and all six outer letters.

NONCOMBATANT

A noncombatant is someone who is not directly involved in fighting, especially in a military or conflict situation.

Letter breakdown:

N + O + N + C + O + M + B + A + T + A + N + T

This longer pangram is especially strong because it builds from combatant with the prefix non-.

Full Word List for Today

Here are the possible words from today’s puzzle, starting from four-letter words.

4-Letter Words

Banc Camo Cant Coat Coca Coma Comb Coot Taco Tact

5-Letter Words

Bacon Cacao Canna Canon Cocoa Combo Comma

6-Letter Words

Bobcat Cabana Cancan Cannon Cannot Canton Cocoon Combat Common Cotton Noncom Tomcat

7-Letter Words

Cantata Concoct Contact Tobacco Toccata

8+ Letter Words

Catacomb Combatant Noncombatant

Strategy Tips from Today’s Puzzle

Build from Strong Roots

The key to solving today’s puzzle was building from strong roots. Once combat appeared, it became much easier to reach combatant. This is a useful Spelling Bee strategy: always check whether a shorter word can be extended with endings like -ant, -ed, -ing, or -tion when the letters allow it.

combat combatant -ant -ed -ing -tion

Test Prefixes

Another helpful method was testing prefixes. The prefix non- was the clue that unlocked NONCOMBATANT. Whenever N and O appear together in a puzzle, it is worth checking whether non- can attach to a longer root word.

N O non- combatant noncombatant

Unlocking the Final Layers

The 12 May 2026 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was a clever and enjoyable challenge. With C at the center, the puzzle encouraged solvers to explore strong word families built around co, ca, com, and con.

co ca com con
combat COMBATANT NONCOMBATANT

The path from combat to COMBATANT and then to NONCOMBATANT made today’s solving experience especially rewarding. It was not just about guessing random words; it was about noticing structure, meaning, and word-building patterns.

If you found both pangrams today, that is an excellent solve. COMBATANT was a strong pangram, but NONCOMBATANT was the real highlight of the puzzle.