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OXON HILL, Md. (AP) — They couldn’t be rattled. They couldn’t be denied. Gokul Venkatachalam and Vanya Shivashankar had worked too hard and come close too many times not to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

So they shared the title on Thursday, making history in two different ways.

The bee hadn’t ended in a tie for 52 years — until last year. Now it’s happened for an unprecedented two years running.

Vanya, 13, of Olathe, Kansas, is the first sibling of a past champion to win. Her sister, Kavya, won in 2009.

Vanya’s final word was “scherenschnitte,” which means the art of cutting paper into decorative designs. After being informed he’d be the co-champion if he got the next word right, Gokul didn’t even bother to ask the definition before spelling “nunatak.” For the record, it means a hill or mountain completely surrounded by glacial ice.

Asked what he thought when he got the word, Gokul said, “Me and Vanya were going to be the champions.”

Gokul, 14, of Chesterfield, Missouri, finished third last year, behind the two co-champions. He had a gruff onstage demeanor, asking about the word’s roots and definition before chugging through the letters as if he had dinner plans.

“I wasn’t nervous,” said Gokul, a LeBron James fan who said his priority for after the bee was watching the NBA Finals.

Both are eighth-graders, so it was their last chance. Vanya was competing in the bee for the fifth and final time. Her sister, Kavya — now a sophomore at Columbia University — competed four times, which means the Shivashankar family has made the trip nine of the past 10 years.

Vanya, who also acts and plays the tuba and piano, dedicated her victory to her late grandmother, who died in 2013.

“Everything takes hard work and passion,” Vanya said. “That’s definitely what I put in and I know Gokul put that into this endeavor as well.”

Proving their superiority over even their toughest competitors, Vanya and Gokul went head-to-head for 10 rounds before the list of 25 championship words was exhausted.

The words included: bouquetière, caudillismo, thamakau, scytale, Bruxellois and pyrrhuloxia. Vanya appeared to struggle only with the Fijian-derived thamaku, which is a type of outrigger canoe.

“It was on our list,” said Mirle Shivashankar, Vanya’s father and spelling coach. “But I couldn’t remember it.”

Before the bee began, executive director Paige Kimble predicted it would be another 50 years before it ended in a tie. Now she’s thinking differently.

“I think it’s time to consider that the bee may be entering a new era where the level of competition is so intense that we need to entertain this as a possibility every year,” she said.

Vanya and Gokul each will receive more than $37,000 in cash and prizes, and while they held up the trophy together as they were being showered with confetti, each will get one to take home. Fourteen-year-old Cole Shafer-Ray of Norman, Oklahoma, making his first appearance in the finals, finished third.

Fourteen of the past 18 winners, including the four champions the past two years, have been Indian-Americans.

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