NECOEnglish LanguageLexis & Structure

An author of plays:

APoet
BPlaywrightCORRECT
CNovelist
DCritic
AI
Toaster Teacher
Why the answer is B, and why the others tempt you.
**The reasoning** This is about understanding the **specific terminology for different types of writers**. Each type of writer has a distinct name based on *what they create*: - A **playwright** writes *plays* (dramas meant to be performed on stage) - A **poet** writes *poems* - A **novelist** writes *novels* (long fictional stories in book form) - A **critic** writes *reviews/analyses* of other people's work The word "playwright" comes from "play" + "wright" (an old English word meaning "maker" or "builder"). So a playwright is literally a "play-maker." Think of Shakespeare, Wole Soyinka, or Femi Osofisan — they're all playwrights. **Why the wrong options tempt you** - **Poet** sounds literary, but poets work with verse and rhythm, not dialogue and stage directions - **Novelist** writes fiction too, but in prose form for *reading*, not performing - **Critic** analyzes and reviews plays but doesn't create them **Quick takeaway** Remember: **"wright" = maker** → playwright makes plays, just like a shipwright makes ships!
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