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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

Today's NYT Spelling Bee puzzle offered a satisfying balance of common vocabulary and clever word-building. The mandatory center letter was A, surrounded by D, I, L, N, O, and R. At first glance, the hive looked generous because it included several frequently used letters, but uncovering the longest words required recognizing hidden patterns and experimenting with repeated letters.

The stars of today's puzzle were DOORNAIL, the puzzle's pangram, and ORDINAL, today's Perfect Pangram. Finding both made for an especially rewarding solving experience.

Center Letter

A

Outer Letters

D • I • L • N • O • R

Perfect Pangram

ORDINAL

Pangram

DOORNAIL

How I Solved Today's Puzzle

Like every Spelling Bee puzzle, I started by focusing on the mandatory center letter A. Every valid answer had to include it, so I began with shorter words to get familiar with the available combinations.

My first discoveries included road, rail, rain, dial, loan, and roan. These words helped establish the strongest letter pairings while revealing that today's puzzle offered several opportunities to build longer words from common roots.

After collecting a good selection of four- and five-letter words, I noticed the letters could form ordinal, a word commonly used in mathematics and grammar to describe numbers indicating position, such as first, second, and third.

Checking the letters carefully confirmed that ORDINAL contained every letter exactly once:

O – R – D – I – N – A – L

That made it today's Perfect Pangram.

Even after finding the perfect pangram, I continued exploring. One of my favorite Spelling Bee habits is to keep testing familiar compound words, and today's puzzle rewarded that persistence.

The word nail appeared early in my solve. Later, after finding door, I wondered whether the two could combine. They did—and DOORNAIL immediately appeared as the puzzle's second pangram.

Discovering both pangrams made today's hive especially enjoyable because one showcased perfect efficiency while the other demonstrated how repeated letters can create longer, equally satisfying solutions.

Today's Pangrams

Perfect Pangram

ORDINAL

Ordinal is an adjective used to describe numbers that indicate position or order, such as first, second, or third.

It uses every available letter exactly once:

O – R – D – I – N – A – L
Pangram

DOORNAIL

Doornail refers to a large-headed nail traditionally used in heavy wooden doors. The word is best known from the expression "dead as a doornail."

It uses every letter from today's hive while repeating the letter O, making it today's regular pangram.

Complete Word List

4-Letter Words

Anal Anon Aria Arid Aril Darn Dial Laid Lain Lair Land Lard Liar Lira Load Loan Naan Nada Nail Nana Oral Raid Rail Rain Rand Rani Rial Road Roan Roar

5-Letter Words

Adron Aioli Anion Annal Ardor Dinar Drain Lanai Llano Nadir Naiad Nodal Radar Radio Radon Rando

6-Letter Words

Dollar Doodad Dorado Inlaid Inland Inroad Ordain Radial Radian

7+ Letter Words

Ordinal (Perfect Pangram) Doornail (Pangram) Andiron Android Landlord Lanolin Railroad

Puzzle Analysis & Final Thoughts

Why Today's Puzzle Was Interesting

Today's hive stood out because it featured both a perfect pangram and a longer regular pangram. Solvers who stopped after finding ORDINAL could easily have missed the equally satisfying DOORNAIL.

Another enjoyable aspect was the abundance of everyday vocabulary. Most of today's highest-scoring words were familiar English terms rather than obscure dictionary entries, making the puzzle accessible while still providing a rewarding challenge.

The puzzle also emphasized the importance of compound words. Recognizing that door and nail could be combined proved to be the key to uncovering the second pangram.

Strategy Lessons from Today's Puzzle
1
Keep searching after finding a pangram.
Today's hive rewarded persistence with both a perfect pangram and a regular pangram.
2
Look for familiar compound words.
Many Spelling Bee puzzles hide high-scoring answers by combining two everyday words together.
3
Don't ignore technical vocabulary.
Words like ordinal appear regularly in English and often become excellent pangram candidates because of their balanced letter combinations.

Final Thoughts

The 3 July 2026 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was a thoughtful and rewarding challenge. The mandatory A encouraged a wide variety of word combinations, while the surrounding letters created opportunities for both common vocabulary and elegant pangrams.

ORDINAL (Perfect Pangram) DOORNAIL (Pangram)

The perfect pangram ORDINAL was a beautiful example of efficient word construction, while DOORNAIL added an extra layer of satisfaction for solvers willing to keep exploring. Together, they made today's puzzle one of the most memorable Spelling Bee challenges of the week.