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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.

NYT Spelling Bee Puzzle – June 8, 2026

The NYT Spelling Bee puzzle for June 8, 2026 delivered an enjoyable challenge built around a compact but surprisingly productive letter set.

With E at the center and surrounded by T, C, D, B, O, and J, today's hive encouraged solvers to experiment with prefixes, suffixes, and uncommon letter combinations.

At first glance, the presence of the rare letter J made the puzzle appear difficult. However, once a few foundational words emerged, the path toward today's pangram became much clearer. The highlight of the puzzle was undoubtedly OBJECTED, a satisfying eight-letter pangram that used every available letter in the hive.

Today’s Pangram

OBJECTED

Today's Letters

Center Letter: E

Outer Letters: T, C, D, B, O, J

T C D E B O J

As always, every valid word had to contain the center letter E, making it the anchor for every solution.

How I Solved Today's Puzzle

I started by identifying some of the shorter words that immediately stood out:

beet bode code cede toe ode

These helped establish the most useful letter combinations and revealed that many words would likely revolve around common -ed endings.

Soon I expanded into slightly longer words:

object booted decoded debited

The appearance of object was the first major clue. Since it already contained several of the puzzle's letters, I suspected it could be extended into something larger.

That instinct proved correct.

By adding the common past-tense ending -ed, I arrived at:

OBJECTED

The moment I counted the letters, I realized it contained every letter available in today's hive, making it the pangram.

Today's Pangram

Pangram

OBJECTED

Definition: Expressed disagreement, opposition, or disapproval.

OBJECTED is a strong Spelling Bee pangram because it combines a familiar everyday word with a complete use of the available letter set.

The word contains:

O – B – J – E – C – T – E – D

and successfully incorporates all seven unique hive letters.

Bonus Words Found

Here are many of the useful words that helped build today's score.

4-Letter Words

Beet Bode Cede Code Coed Cote Debt Deco Deed Dote Jete Oboe Teed Toed Tote

5-Letter Words

Bocce Boded Booed Ceded Coded Cooed Doted Ebbed Eject Octet Toted

6-Letter Words

Bedded Bobbed Booted Bootee Decoct Decode Deeded Deject Detect Dotted Jetted Jobbed Jotted Object Tooted

7-Letter Words

Decoded Ejected

8+ Letter Words

Objected (pangram) Decocted Dejected Detected

Why Today's Puzzle Was Interesting

Today's puzzle rewarded solvers who recognized root words and tested common grammatical extensions.

code decode decoded

object objected

This pattern demonstrates one of the most effective Spelling Bee strategies: building larger words from familiar foundations.

The inclusion of the uncommon letter J also added an extra layer of difficulty. Many players naturally focus on common letters first, but today's pangram required incorporating the rarest letter in the hive.

Another notable feature was the prevalence of:

past-tense verbs -ed endings object-related word structures

These clues ultimately pointed toward the winning answer.

Strategy Tips from Today's Puzzle

1. Use Rare Letters Early

Letters like J often play a key role in pangrams.

2. Look for Root Words

Finding object made objected much easier to uncover.

3. Test Common Endings

Adding -ed frequently reveals longer and higher-scoring answers.

4. Build Progressively

Start with simple words and extend them step by step rather than searching immediately for the pangram.

Vocabulary Wins of the Day

The June 8, 2026 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was a rewarding challenge that balanced accessibility with clever word construction. While many shorter words provided steady progress, the real excitement came from discovering OBJECTED, today's standout pangram.

The puzzle highlighted the importance of recognizing root words, embracing uncommon letters, and experimenting with familiar endings. Solvers who followed those patterns were rewarded with a satisfying route to the pangram and a strong score.

If you found OBJECTED today, congratulations on another excellent Spelling Bee solve.