Oxford English Dictionary - poet

Copyright Oxford University Press

poet 'p<e>UIt. Forms: 4-5 poyete, 4-6 poete, 5 poiet, poyte, 5-6 poite, poiett, poyet, 4- poet.

Etymology: ME. poete, poyete, a. OFr. poete (12th c. in Hatz.-Darm.), mod.Fr. poète, ad. L. poeta (Plaut.), ad. Gr. pohthj, early variant of poihthj maker, author, poet (cf. maker 5), f. poein, poiein to make, create, produce. (An early Gr. word in L.; if introduced at a later period, the form would have been poeeta.)

1 a One who composes poetry; a writer of poems; an author who writes in verse. (The ordinary current use; but now usually implying more or less of the sense of c.)

b Formerly (after Gr. and L. use), in more general sense: One who makes or composes works of literature; an author, writer. Obs.

c In select or emphatic sense: A writer in verse (or sometimes, in extended use, in elevated prose) distinguished by special imaginative or creative power, insight, sensibility, and faculty of expression. (Cf. poetry 3 c.) poet's poet, a poet whose poetry is generally considered to appeal chiefly to other poets.

d Hence occas., by further extension, applied rhetorically in a similar sense to one who practises any of the fine arts.

e poet-in-ordinary, a poet ordinarily employed (after physician-in-ordinary, etc., ordinary sb. 18 b). poet-in-residence, a poet working in or associated with a university or college or a community (see residence sb.[1] 2 b). poet-laureate: see laureate a. 2 b.

Hence poet-laureateship = laureateship a.

f fig. Applied to a singing bird.

g A scholar in the poetry class: see poetry 6.

2 attrib. and Comb. a appositive (= `that is a poet'), as poet-actor, -artist, -bird, -bishop, -bounce (bounce sb.[1] 4 b), -boy, -composer, -critic, -dramatist, -historian, -humorist, -king, -musician, -novelist, -painter, -pilgrim, -ploughman, -preacher, -priest, -princess, -prophet, -saint, -satirist, -seer, -singer, sucker (= `sucking' poet), -thinker, -warrior, -woman, etc. b Of or pertaining to a poet, as poet-craft, -heart, -nectar, -song, -soul, etc.; so poet-wise adv. c objective, etc., as poet-ape (one who apes a poet), -hater, -whipper, -worship. d instrumental, etc., as poet-haunted, -hymned adjs.; poet-like adj. and adv.

e Combinations with poets' or poet's: poets' cassia, the fragrant shrub anciently called cassia, supposed to be Osyris alba (see cassia[1] 3); Poets' Corner, (a)name for a part of the south transept of Westminster Abbey, which contains the graves and monuments of several distinguished poets (called, in the Spectator 1711, `the poetical Quarter': see poetical a. 1); (b)applied humorously to a part of a newspaper or other periodical containing short poetical contributions; poet's daffodil = poets' narcissus; poets' (or poet's) narcissus, the common white narcissus, N. poeticus; also = pheasant's eye 2; poets' rosemary = poets' cassia.