Why the answer is B, and why the others tempt you.
## The reasoning
Mitosis is **cell division for growth and repair**. Think of it like photocopying: one parent cell splits to make exact copies of itself. The process goes through stages (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase), but the key outcome is simple: **one cell becomes two identical daughter cells**. Each daughter cell gets the same number of chromosomes as the parent (diploid → diploid in humans, that's 46 chromosomes each). This happens when your skin heals a cut or when you're growing taller.
## Why the wrong options tempt you
**1 daughter cell** — That's not division at all! You might confuse this with cell growth before division starts.
**4 daughter cells** — This is the classic trap! **Meiosis** (sex cell formation) produces 4 cells. Students mix up mitosis and meiosis because they sound similar.
**8 daughter cells** — Perhaps you're thinking of multiple rounds of division, but the question asks about *one* mitotic event.
## Quick takeaway
**"Mi-TWO-sis"** — Let the "two" sound remind you: mitosis always gives you 2 identical daughter cells for body growth; meiosis gives 4 different cells for reproduction.
Want this in Pidgin, Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa? Sign up free →
Practice more Biology questions
WAEC Biology has thousands more questions like this — with Worked answers on every one.