Wisconsinites, your word is "embarrassing."

The National Spelling Bee is currently underway, so Google Trends, the Twitter account featuring the official data and visualizations from the company, assembled a map of each U.S. state's most misspelled word – as determined by the word that's most searched with "how to spell."

The results are fun until you reach Wesconsin Wiskonsen our home state.

America's most misspelled words - it's #spellingbee week and we mapped top "how to spell" searches by state#dataviz pic.twitter.com/oHkRHj8Eku — GoogleTrends (@GoogleTrends) May 30, 2017

Keep up the good work, Wisconsin. pic.twitter.com/Nm4bMh5eG1 — stefan (@boring_as_heck) May 30, 2017

Low blow, Google! Well I guess I'm just going to use Bing from now on.

As for the other states, most fared at least a little better. "Pneumonia" was one of the most commonly misspelled words, with four states – Washington, Maine, Michigan and Alabama – having to hit the search bar to figure it out. "Beautiful" also sent four states into a tizzy – Minnesota, Ohio, Kentucky and New York – which tells me a lot of people in those states haven't seen "Bruce Almighty."

Meanwhile, Vermont has trouble with diarrhea – the word, and, if you're Googling it that much, probably the ailment, too.

West Virginia and Connecticut were showoffs with the longest misspelled words, both with "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" as their biggest spelling speed bump, while seven states – Oregon, Idaho, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina and Rhode Island – had their primary struggles with words that aren't even five letters long.

In Georgia and Rhode Island's case, their words have less letters than the average person has fingers on a hand – though in fairness, Georgia's "gray" can easily be misspelled with an E, and I can see Rhode Island's confusion in whether an A or an E for "liar." It's certainly more understandable than New Mexico's "banana," which sounds just like it's spelled.

And it's certainly more understandable than Wisconsin not being able to spell ... itself. Maybe if we could have it used in a sentence, such as "That sound you just heard was the entire state of Wisconsin facepalming."

But hey, I bet none of those other states can spell Ashwaubenon or Potawatomi – and we sure as hell know they can't pronounce them.

Point: Wiscansin.