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.
NYT Spelling Bee Answers for April 15, 2026
The NYT Spelling Bee puzzle for April 15, 2026, featured a clean and structured set of letters with A in the center and P, E, N, V, M, T around it. While the board looked simple at first glance, solving it efficiently depended on building from strong four-letter bases rather than relying on shorter combinations.
The standout solution for today’s puzzle was the pangram PAVEMENT. It is the kind of answer that emerges only after a few solid base words reveal the deeper pattern of the board.
Today’s Letters
Today’s letter set was A in the center, with P, E, N, V, M, T around it. Since every valid answer had to include A, the best approach was to begin with sturdy four-letter patterns and grow outward from there.
How I Solved Today’s Puzzle (4-Letter Strategy)
Instead of starting with 3-letter words, I went directly to four-letter base words, since those are much more useful for building longer answers and eventually uncovering the pangram.
Strong starter words
Best pairings noticed early
This gave a much better structural understanding of the puzzle than shorter words usually do. Once those foundations were in place, the board started to feel less random and much easier to expand into more complex answers.
Building from 4-Letter Foundations
Once I had a few strong four-letter words, the next step was to extend them into longer forms. This is where the puzzle really started opening up, because those short bases made it easier to see larger structures instead of guessing randomly.
Expand the first reliable base words
I started growing the early four-letter words into more useful patterns. That led to chains like pane → panel, mate → meant, and tape → taper. This step matters because four-letter words often act as building blocks that reveal natural extensions and make the board feel much more logical.
Look for recognizable fragments
At this stage, I began spotting fragments that looked strong enough to belong inside a longer answer. Two pieces stood out in particular: pave and ment. Both are familiar, structurally useful, and common enough to suggest that they might combine into something meaningful.
Useful fragments spotted
Recognize the pangram pattern
Once those pieces were visible, the final pattern felt natural. “Pave” works as a complete base, and “ment” is one of the most familiar suffixes in English. Putting them together led directly to the answer without forcing random combinations.
This word uses all the letters — P, A, V, E, M, E, N, T — and satisfies every condition of the puzzle. The discovery felt especially satisfying because it came from combining two recognizable parts rather than stumbling into the answer by chance.
Meaning: a paved surface, typically used for walking or roads.
Full Word List (Possible Answers)
Here are some commonly found valid words from today’s puzzle. This board is a great example of how starting from stronger four-letter foundations can help you move naturally into longer, more complex answers.