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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 was one of the most rewarding in recent memory because it featured three pangrams hidden within a deceptively simple set of letters. The hive placed B at the center, with A, E, H, I, L, and T surrounding it. At first glance, the puzzle appeared limited, but once I started building longer words, the possibilities expanded quickly.

The highlights of today's puzzle were BIATHLETE, HABITABLE, and HITTABLE. Finding one pangram is always satisfying, but uncovering all three made today's challenge particularly memorable.

Center Letter

B

Outer Letters

A • E • H • I • L • T

Pangrams

BIATHLETE HABITABLE HITTABLE

How I Solved Today's Puzzle

Building Momentum

As always, I began by focusing on the mandatory center letter B, since every valid Spelling Bee answer must include it.

Starting with Short Words

I started with a few simple words like bait bath belt beta bite and able. These shorter entries helped me identify useful letter combinations while building momentum.

Recognizing Word Patterns

After collecting several four- and five-letter words, I noticed the letters supported many words ending in -able. Since able itself was available, I experimented by attaching common prefixes.

The First Pangram Appears

That approach paid off almost immediately.

The first major discovery was HABITABLE. I already had habit in mind, and adding -able created a long word that used every letter in today's hive. After checking each letter carefully, I confirmed it as the first pangram.

Keeping the Search Going

Rather than stopping there, I kept exploring.

Next, I noticed the letters also formed BIATHLETE, a familiar word from the Winter Olympics. Once again, every letter appeared in the word, giving me a second pangram.

The Final Breakthrough

Finally, I experimented with verbs ending in -able. Starting from hit, I extended it to HITTABLE, and surprisingly, it also satisfied every letter requirement.

BIATHLETE • HABITABLE • HITTABLE

A Rare Three-Pangram Puzzle

Finding three pangrams in one puzzle made today's hive especially enjoyable and reinforced the importance of continuing to search even after discovering a long answer.

Today's Pangrams

Pangram

BIATHLETE

A biathlete is an athlete who competes in the sport of biathlon, combining cross-country skiing and rifle shooting.

Pangram

HABITABLE

Habitable means suitable or fit for people to live in.

Pangram

HITTABLE

Hittable describes something that is capable of being hit, especially in sports such as baseball.

Complete Word List

4-Letter Words

Abet Able Baba Babe Baht Bail Bait Bale Ball Bate Bath Beat Beet Bell Belt Beta Bile Bill Bite Blab Blah Blat

5-Letter Words

Abate Alibi Babel Bathe Belie Belle Betel Bible Bleat Habit Label Labia Libel Tabla Table Tibia

6-Letter Words

Ablate Albeit Babble Ballet Battle Beetle Billet Blithe Labial Labile Liable Tablet Tibiae Tibial

7+ Letter Words

Biathlete (Pangram) Habitable (Pangram) Hittable (Pangram) Beatable Belittle Bilabial Billable Habitat Heteable Healable Heatable Libelee

Why Today's Puzzle Was Interesting

Three Different Pangram Paths

Today's hive was remarkable because it contained three distinct pangrams, each built using a completely different word-building pattern.

HABITABLE rewarded players who explored the productive -able suffix, while BIATHLETE relied on recognizing a specialized sports term familiar from Olympic competition. Meanwhile, HITTABLE demonstrated how an everyday verb can naturally expand into a long, valid Spelling Bee answer.

Accessible Yet Rewarding

Another enjoyable aspect of today's puzzle was the abundance of familiar vocabulary. Although the pangrams were long, they were all recognizable English words rather than obscure dictionary entries.

That balance made today's hive approachable for casual solvers while still offering experienced players the satisfaction of uncovering multiple high-scoring discoveries.

Strategy Lessons from Today's Puzzle

Keep Searching Beyond One Pangram

  • Never stop after finding one pangram. Multiple pangrams often exist, and today's hive was a perfect example.
  • Pay attention to common suffixes like -able, as they frequently unlock some of the highest-scoring words.

Expand Your Vocabulary

  • Explore words from different fields. Sports, science, and everyday language all appear regularly in the Spelling Bee dictionary.
  • Build from smaller words. Discovering able, habit, and hit naturally led to three of today's biggest answers.
Final Thoughts

Wrapping Up Today's Hive

The 4 July 2026 NYT Spelling Bee puzzle was an excellent showcase of creative word-building. The mandatory B connected a wide variety of words, while the surrounding letters produced an impressive trio of pangrams.


BIATHLETE, HABITABLE, and HITTABLE each required a slightly different way of thinking, making today's puzzle both challenging and rewarding. Whether you found all three or uncovered just one, today's hive was another reminder that persistence, experimentation, and pattern recognition are the keys to mastering the NYT Spelling Bee.