A Victoria sixth grader took his love of words to a new high, scoring a runner-up award that puts $10,000 into the local Habitat for Humanity coffers.
Levi Budd was among 13,000 students in grades 4, 5 and 6 who entered the third consecutive Habitat for Humanity Canada鈥檚 Meaning of Home contest. Three grand prize winners won a $30,000 grant each for a local Habitat while nine runners-up won a $10,000 grant.
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In his award-winning piece, the St. Michaels University School student shares of himself and how home is a safe space.
鈥淚f life is a raging, ravaging, rocking, rough ocean, then home is my dock. My home is my favourite thing in the world, though ice cream is a close second,鈥 Budd writes.
The charity is delighted to receive a $10,000 grant for its build fund, according to the director of family services at Habitat for Humanity Victoria.
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鈥淚n essence, schoolchildren in Victoria are directly contributing to building homes in our community. We hope next year even more students are given this opportunity to participate in this impactful contest. Special thanks to Levi, his classmates, and all of the Greater Victoria entrants,鈥 Tiffany Gates said.
Every student who entered the contest earned a $10 donation for their local Habitat in the contest, raising $311,000 for local Habitat for Humanity organizations across Canada.
Budd has had a passion for words from a young age. Oak Bay 亚洲天堂 readers will be familiar with his name as the boy behind the term levidrome that made headlines in 2018.
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Then 6, he hoped to fix a gaping hole in the English language by inventing a new word and made a bid to get it in the dictionary. Defined by Levi Budd, a levidrome is a word that contains the same lettering but spells a different word when written backwards.
He鈥檇 discovered palindromes 鈥 words or phrases such as 鈥淏ob鈥 that read the same forward and backward 鈥 and couldn鈥檛 get enough.
While the #levidrome conversation continues online, it has yet to appear in the dictionary.
Visit to read all the winning work.
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