A genius or "Wonder kin"
lots
There really is no term used for those who invent words. Neologism is the word for a new word or expression.
Lots of words - look in a dictionary. Examples would be xenophobia, xylophone, xray.
A quote is to repeat some else's words; be sure to use quote marks if you write it down.
X-ray is an action word describing the action of x-raying someone. Xerox is an action word describing the action of making a copy.
there are lots of words for like
lots....
lots
Competent is a good fit.
lots like retch,catcher,catch, arc hiter, lots of word i dont have the time
There is no formal term for those who simply spell well (good spellers), but someone who knows many words could be vocabularian or vocabularist (already used for a vocabulary programming application).
No, paraphrasing is restating someone else's ideas or words in your own words, while quoting is directly copying someone else's words.
lunch, munch, lots of different words.
The word you might be looking for is "obvious" or "self-evident."
Two English words that sound identical to the word "nose" but differ in spelling are "knows", the third-person of "know", and "nos", the plural of the word "no".
Well, a lot is actually two words. The word "a" is an adjective and the word lot could be an adjective the way you use it. The words "a lot" are actually informal substations for the words many and much.
To say about someone that she is a walking dictionary, means that she knows the definitions of a remarkable number of words, so that if you were to ask her what a given word means, she would probably know.