Analysis of Lottery Results and Payment Rules for Tennessee and Washington on May 14, 2026
Introduction
This report provides the winning numbers and the rules for claiming prizes for the Tennessee and Washington state lotteries for May 14, 2026.
Main Body
The Tennessee Lottery results for May 14, 2026, include several different games. For Cash 3, the winning numbers were 4-3-3 (morning), 8-4-8 (midday), and 3-6-5 (evening). For Cash 4, the results were 5-9-2-6 (morning), 8-3-1-3 (midday), and 8-7-6-0 (evening). Other winning sequences were 01-03-05-10-15 and 12-32-36-37-40 with a bonus of 02. Regarding payments, Tennessee stores can pay prizes up to $599. If a prize is higher than this, the winner must send a claim by mail to the Nashville headquarters or visit a regional office. While the Nashville office can process any amount, the offices in Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Memphis can only pay up to $199,999. At the same time, the Washington Lottery reported its results for May 14, 2026. The winning sequences were 04; 07-09-07; 07-08-09-15; 09-16-17-35-38; and a long sequence ending in 80. In Washington, the rules state that retailers can pay prizes up to $600. For larger amounts, winners must either mail a claim to the Olympia headquarters or visit a regional office in person. Furthermore, they must provide a photo ID and Social Security documentation to receive their payment.
Conclusion
Both states have announced their winning numbers for May 14, 2026, and use a tiered system for paying prizes based on the amount of money won.
Learning
⥠The 'B2 Leap': Moving from Simple to Precise
An A2 student says: "If the money is big, go to the office."
A B2 speaker says: "If a prize is higher than $599, the winner must send a claim."
The Secret: Precision through 'Constraints'
In this text, we see a pattern called Conditional Requirements. To move toward B2, you must stop using vague words (like big, small, a lot) and start using precise thresholds and formal obligations.
đ Linguistic Breakdown: The "Limit" Structure
Look at how the text handles money and rules:
...can pay prizes up to $599....can only pay up to $199,999.
The Logic:
[Subject] + [Ability/Permission] + [Limit Phrase] + [Amount]
Instead of saying "You can get $600 at the store," the text uses "up to," which creates a clear boundary. This is a hallmark of professional B2 English.
đ Upgrade Your Vocabulary
Stop using "basic" verbs. Replace them with these "precise" versions found in the text:
| A2 Word (Basic) | B2 Word (Precise) | Context from Text |
|---|---|---|
| Give/Get | Process | "...the Nashville office can process any amount." |
| Ask for | Claim | "...the winner must send a claim by mail." |
| Show | Provide | "...they must provide a photo ID." |
đĄ Pro Tip: The "Must" vs "Can" Contrast
Notice the shift in authority in the article.
- CAN Permission/Possibility ("stores can pay...")
- MUST Absolute Requirement ("winners must either mail...")
To sound like a B2 user, use MUST when explaining official rules and CAN when explaining options. This clarity is what separates a beginner from a fluent speaker.