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PlagiarismUsing another's ideas or work without assigning credit. May be intentional or unintentional. For more information, see Plagiarism and the Academic Code
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Plagiarismn. taking the writings or literary concepts (a plot, characters, ...
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Plagiarisme reproduction or appropriation of someone else's work without proper attribution; passing off as one's own the work of someone else
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Plagiarism1620s, from -ism + plagiary (n.) "plagiarist, literary thief" (1590s), from Latin plagiarius "kidnapper, seducer, plunderer, one who kidnaps the child or slave of another," used by [..]
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PlagiarismUse of another person's information, language, or ideas without citing the originator and making it appear that the user is the originator. [SB]
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PlagiarismAccidental or intentional intellectual theft in which a writer, poet, artist, scholar, or student steals an original idea, phrase, or section of writing from someone else and presents this material as [..]
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is the presentation of work, ideas or data of others as one's own without appropriate acknowledgement.
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PlagiarismDeliberately passing off somebody elses original expression or creative ideas as ones own. Plagiarism can be a violation of law if copyrighted expression is taken. Often, however, plagiarism does not [..]
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Plagiarismliterary theft; when a writer duplicates another writer's language or ideas and then calls the work his own; to avoid the charge of plagiarism, writers take care to credit those from whom they borrow and quote. Platitude:
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PlagiarismThe use of quotes, words or ideas taken from a source without crediting them is plagiarism, which is regarded as a form of cheating in universities.
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Plagiarismpass off the thoughts as one’s own. Act of taking someone else’s ideas, words and using them as if they were one’s own.
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Plagiarismn. The stealing of passages from the writings of another and publishing them as one's own.
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PlagiarismFailure to give the source of a quotation or paraphrase in which the language, thoughts, or ideas of another person are used as one's own. (Unit 8> Giving Credit Where Credit is Due)
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PlagiarismTo plagiarize is to copy or borrow the work or ideas of another author without acknowledgement. It is both unethical and illegal. When you are writing anything, such as essays, reports, dissertations, [..]
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PlagiarismPlagiarism: Using other people's words, ideas, research findings or information without acknowledgment, that is, without indicating the source. (Refer Plagiarism and Collusion in Assessment procedure)
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PlagiarismFrom the Latin plagiarius, meaning "kidnapper." Copying or closely imitating the work of another writer, composer, etc., without permission and with the intention of passing the results off [..]
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PlagiarismAny use of the ideas or writings of another person without providing credit to the original author.
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PlagiarismTo use the work of another person as if it was one’s own, without attribution. It is unethical.
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is where you use the ideas, words, theories or work of someone else in your own work without acknowledging them. This can happen intentionally (by cutting and pasting from an article) or un [..]
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PlagiarismStealing the work of another person (both written words and intellectual property) and calling it your own.
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Plagiarismusing the work of another person (both written words and intellectual property) and calling that work your own
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PlagiarismCopying another's work and passing it off as one's own.
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PlagiarismThe use of any part of another's writing and passing it off as your own.
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PlagiarismYou are guilty of plagiarism if you copy someone else’s work, intentionally or otherwise. To learn how to avoid plagiarism, read my guide here.
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PlagiarismThe act of taking ideas and writings from another and passing them off as one's own. Click here for more information on Plagiarism
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PlagiarismStealing someone else's work and pretending it's yours.
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is taking the writings or literary ideas of another and selling and/or publishing them as one's own writing. Brief quotes or use of cited sources do not constitute plagiarism. The orig [..]
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is the act of representing someone else’s work (research, writing, creative work etc) as your own, without attributing appropriate acknowledgement to the true author or creator. Your instit [..]
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Plagiarism(n) a piece of writing that has been copied from someone else and is presented as being your own work(n) the act of plagiarizing; taking someone's words or ideas as if they were your own
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PlagiarismRepresenting another person's ideas or work as one's own by copying or reproducing without appropriate acknowledgment of the source. See also academic dishonesty and cheating. See section C/ [..]
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PlagiarismThe presentation of the work of another person, or other persons, as if it were one’s own, whether intended or not. This includes published and unpublished work, material on the Internet and the work of other students and staff.
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PlagiarismPresenting another person’s work as one’s own without the proper academic acknowledgement and recognition.
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Plagiarism Literary theft, to take ideas or writings from someone else and present them as your own.
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Plagiarism
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PlagiarismThe presentation of another person’s or source’s words and/or ideas as one’s own. Plagiarism ranges from an entire assignment that is not the student’s own work to specific passages within an assignment taken from a source without acknowledgment.
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PlagiarismThe use or close imitation of language, paintings, films, prototypes and ideas of another author and representation of them as one's own original work. The most common forms of plagiarism are: copying or paraphrasing another author’s work without proper acknowledgement, using the ideas or lines of reasoning of another author’s work without pro [..]
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is a form of academic dishonesty that consists of using someone else's words or ideas without clearly identifying the source of those words or ideas. The University of Scranton’s complete Academic Code of Honesty can be found here.
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PlagiarismThe stealing and/or passing off someone else's ideas and/or work as you own or using the work of another individual without crediting her or him.
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Plagiarismthe practice of using someone else's work or ideas, unacknowledged, as if they were one's own. The internet has vastly increased the potential for this form of deceit to be exercised but mod [..]
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PlagiarismThe use of another person's words or ideas as your own, without acknowledging that person. Schools have different policies and punishments for students caught plagiarizing, which tends to occur with research papers and other written assignments.[Back to Top]
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PlagiarismThe use of another person's words or ideas as your own, without acknowledging that person. Universities have different policies and punishments for students caught plagiarizing. Plagiarism most often occurs with research papers and other written assignments.
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PlagiarismThe illegal and non-attributed copying of another's work and claiming it as one's own.
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Plagiarismincludes but is not limited to the submission or presentation of oral or written words and/or ideas of others without proper acknowledgement. It is an academic offence. It ranges from an entire assign [..]
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is a specific and serious form of academic misconduct, and includes:
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PlagiarismPassing off as one's own the Work of another without credit.
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Plagiarismis the inappropriate use of someone else’s work, for example, copying or close paraphrasing from a book, website or another student where your use of this work is too substantial, too close and/or ins [..]
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PlagiarismPassing off as one's own the work of another without credit.
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PlagiarismPresenting another person's language or ideas as one's own.
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PlagiarismWhen a piece of writing that has been copied from someone else is presented as being your own work, or taking someone else's words or ideas as if they were your own.
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PlagiarismCopying of another's work and presenting it as your own.
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Plagiarismrefers to the unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the misrepresentation of them as one's own original work. This includes not only taking an aut [..]
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PlagiarismWhile plagiarism can be copyright infringement and an accusation of …
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PlagiarismThe act of taking the writings of another person and passing them off as one's own. The fraudulence is closely related to forgery and piracy - practices generally in violation of copyright laws.
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PlagiarismPlagiarism is the use of another person's words or ideas and passing them off as your own.
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Plagiarismthe practice of trying to use someone else’s work, idea, piece of writing as if it were your own.
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PlagiarismUsing the work (or part of it) of another person and claiming it as your own. (2)
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Plagiarismthe act of stealing or passing off as one' own the ideas or words of another; to present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source. (Web9)
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