[
US
/ˈpɫeɪdʒɝˌɪzəm/
]
[ UK /plˈeɪdʒəɹˌɪzəm/ ]
[ UK /plˈeɪdʒəɹˌɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
- a piece of writing that has been copied from someone else and is presented as being your own work
- the act of plagiarizing; taking someone's words or ideas as if they were your own
How To Use plagiarism In A Sentence
- If Ms. Singh truly believes that plagiarism took place, why was there not a single reference to a line, paragraph or ‘whole chunks’ as she so eruditely puts it?
- Towards the end, deception, fraud and plagiarism are laid bare.
- ``Only to save you from accusations of plagiarism, me old son. THE SHIPPING NEWS
- a careful ear may catch some far faint echo even yet; the fearful and furtive yelp from beneath of the masked and writhing poeticule, the shrill reverberation all around it of plagiarism and parody. A Study of Shakespeare
- Now he's in real trouble. He's accused of plagiarism.
- There are many concerns with providing a classroom lecture on academic integrity and plagiarism.
- In Kazakhstan they have started checking the dissertations for plagiarism - 8 years after all civilized countries and against the background of mass download of theses from the Internet. Global Voices in English » Kazakhstan: Educational deadlock
- If you carelessly cite a source or inadvertently copy a sentence in toto without adequate attribution, you run the risk of being accused of plagiarism.
- Ambrose, by contrast, was guilty of wholesale plagiarism and was unrepentant.
- Blogs, wikis, podcasts, videocasts, and open source software are just a few of the emerging technologies prompting discussions about social networking, censorship, misinformation, plagiarism, and the role of technology in our schools.