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    • \ ˈpō-ət \

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    [Noun]  | "po*et" | \ ˈpō-ət \


    1: one who writes poetry : a maker of verses

    2: one (such as a creative artist) of great imaginative and expressive capabilities and special sensitivity to the medium


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English, from Anglo-French poete, from Latin poeta, from Greek poiētēs maker, poet, from poiein to make; akin to Sanskrit cinoti he gathers, heaps up;

    [Noun]  | "poet laureate" 


    1: a poet honored for achievement

    2: a poet appointed for life by an English sovereign as a member of the royal household and formerly expected to compose poems for court and national occasions

    3: a poet appointed annually by the U.S. Library of Congress as a consultant and typically involved in the promotion of poetry


    Origin: 15th century ;

    [Noun]  | "prose poem" 


    1: a composition in prose that has some of the qualities of a poem


    Origin: 1716 ;

    [Noun]  | "tone poem" 


    1: symphonic poem


    Origin: 1902 ;

    [Noun]  | "poets" 


    1: a person who writes poetry;


      * e.g., " ... Emily Dickinson is famous as the poet who rarely left the house but often journeyed to the depths of the human heart "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Noun]  | "poet" 


    1: a person who writes poetry;


      * e.g., " ... Emily Dickinson is famous as the poet who rarely left the house but often journeyed to the depths of the human heart "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Noun]  | "poets laureate" 


    1: as in poets, poetasters;


    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "The Poet" ]

    1: Code name for a mole or undercover government informat.

      * e.g.,  ... The bust was successful thanks impart to "The Poet" working undercover and providing information. 

     [ "Poet" ]

    1: A map-maker of the collective unconscious.

      * e.g.,  ... "Watch out!" The Poet said, "Here there be dragons." 

     [ "poeting" ]

    1: Poeting (v) po-et-ting-- a poet that is actively writing or performing spoken word poetry

      * e.g.,  ... "Coming to the stage Poeting all the way from Miami, Florida..." 

     [ "poet" ]

    1: Ruler of the world simply on the grounds that he/she speaks in a form that is ellegant, and must understand that poetry was spoken before it was ever written.

      * e.g.,  ... Langston hughes was a great poet. 

     [ "poet" ]

    1: a poet doesn’t fear

      * e.g.,  ... a poet doesn't fear 


     [ "poet" ]

    2: a poet doesn’t fear


     [ "poet" ]

    3: blindness


     [ "poet" ]

    4: since darkness was and is


     [ "poet" ]

    5: an unwavering companion


     [ "poet" ]

    6: a poet doesn’t fear


     [ "poet" ]

    7: abandonment


     [ "poet" ]

    8: take a slice of me when you go


     [ "poet" ]

    9: and i will write myself better


     [ "poet" ]

    10: a poet doesn’t fear


     [ "poet" ]

    11: deafness


     [ "poet" ]

    12: since silence has carried him


     [ "poet" ]

    13: through countless metallic archways of night


     [ "poet" ]

    14: no it is not these things –


     [ "poet" ]

    15: a poet fears only


     [ "poet" ]

    16: that his heart will go out


     [ "poet" ]

    17: still full of ink


     [ "poet" ]

    18: -Robbie Woods

     [ "POETS" ]

    1: Piss Off Early Tomorrow's Saturday

      * e.g.,  ... Friday is POETS day... 

     [ "poet" ]

    1: someone who makes chicks seem to go crazy.

      * e.g.,  ... im a poet. unlike prose writers when i form my sentences it doesnt make any coherent sense but it sounds fuckin cool anyway. 

     [ "poet" ]

    1: A person who writes poetry. The archaic term for a female poet is "poetess", but due to some feminists concidering the term sexist, "poetess" isn't used much now.

      * e.g.,  ... 'S e bàrd a th'annam (It is a poet that I am). 


     [ "poet" ]

    2: Also known as a bard (straight from the Gaelic "bàrd"), or troubador(from Latin and French), and especially known as these things in the Midieval Era.

     [ "POETS" ]

    1: Piss Off Early Tomorrow's Saturday

      * e.g.,  ... Friday is POETS day. 

     [ "poet" ]

    1: A

      * e.g.,  ... Everyone's a poet ... only they just don't know it. 


     [ "poet" ]

    2: Poet


     [ "poet" ]

    3: Used to be


     [ "poet" ]

    4: someone who


     [ "poet" ]

    5: Wrote a lot of lines that rhymed & were otherwise


     [ "poet" ]

    6: possessed of a musical quality that did not


     [ "poet" ]

    7: necessarily require


     [ "poet" ]

    8: strings or drums in the


     [ "poet" ]

    9: background


     [ "poet" ]

    10: & was altogether too smart for words


     [ "poet" ]

    11: Now a poet is


     [ "poet" ]

    12: just


     [ "poet" ]

    13: someone who


     [ "poet" ]

    14: fucks about with the length


     [ "poet" ]

    15: of


     [ "poet" ]

    16: lines


     [ "poet" ]

    17: so as to make


     [ "poet" ]

    18: the utterly


     [ "poet" ]

    19: banal


     [ "poet" ]

    20: appear to have unplumbed depths of meaning


     [ "poet" ]

    21: which I suppose


     [ "poet" ]

    22: is at least moderately


     [ "poet" ]

    23: more


     [ "poet" ]

    24: democratic

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