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 Spelling Bee Pangram: UNKNOTTING
Today’s NYT Spelling Bee puzzle gave solvers a compact but clever letter set, with K as the required center letter. The outer letters were G, I, T, U, N, and O, creating a puzzle that looked challenging at first because K can be a restrictive center letter.
UNKNOTTING
This is a strong and satisfying pangram because it uses all seven letters from today’s puzzle: U, N, K, O, T, I, and G. It also includes the required center letter K, making it the key word of the entire grid.
Today’s Letters
How I Solved Today’s Puzzle
I started the puzzle by focusing on the center letter K. Since every valid Spelling Bee word must contain the center letter, I immediately ignored any word that did not include K. This made the puzzle feel narrow at first, but it also gave the solving process a clear direction.
These shorter answers helped reveal the strongest patterns in the puzzle. The letter combination KN stood out quickly, especially because both N and K were available.
The Breakthrough Path
Once I found knot, I looked for extensions. The letters I, N, and G made the -ing ending an important clue. Then the available U opened the door to the prefix un-.
That was the breakthrough moment. The word came together beautifully: it used every letter, included the center K, and followed a natural word-building path from a smaller root.
Pangram Breakdown: UNKNOTTING
UNKNOTTING
Unknotting means loosening, untying, or removing knots from something. It can refer to untangling a rope, thread, string, or even solving something complicated.
Letter Breakdown
Why This Pangram Matters
The word uses all seven available letters and repeats N and T, which is allowed in Spelling Bee. This is an excellent reminder that repeated letters often unlock the longest and most valuable answers.
Full Word List for Today
Here are the possible words from today’s puzzle, starting from four-letter words.
4-Letter Words
6-Letter Words
7+ Letter Words
Strategy Tips from Today’s Puzzle
Follow the KN Pattern
The most important strategy today was identifying the KN pattern. Once words like knit and knot appeared, the puzzle became much easier to navigate.
Watch for -ING Endings
Whenever I, N, and G appear together, it is worth testing action words. This strategy helped reveal kiting, toking, knotting, and eventually unknotting.
Think About Prefixes
The prefix un- was the key to today's pangram. After finding knotting, adding un- immediately produced the complete pangram.
Whenever U and N are available, check whether un- can extend an existing word.
Vocabulary Wins of the Day
The 24 May 2026 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was a smart and rewarding challenge. With K at the center, the puzzle encouraged solvers to think carefully about word roots, prefixes, and repeated letters rather than relying on obvious vocabulary.
The Most Satisfying Discovery
The journey from knot to knotting and finally to UNKNOTTING made today's solve especially satisfying. Rather than feeling like a random long word, the pangram emerged naturally through a sequence of logical word-building steps.
If you found UNKNOTTING, that was an excellent solve and a strong move toward Genius level. Today's puzzle serves as a perfect reminder that one simple root word can unlock the biggest answer in the hive.
Spelling Bee Lesson of the Day
Small roots create big opportunities. Finding a basic word like knot can often lead to extensions, prefixes, suffixes, and ultimately the puzzle's most valuable word.