plagiarism
nounEtymology
Etymology tree Latin plagium Proto-Indo-European *-yósder. Proto-Italic *-āsjos Latin -āriusnom. Latin -ārius Latin plagiārius English plagiary Proto-Indo-European *-id- Proto-Indo-European *-yéti Proto-Indo-European *-idyéti Proto-Hellenic *-íďďō Ancient Greek -ῐ́ζω (-ĭ́zō) Proto-Indo-European *-mos Proto-Indo-European *-mós Ancient Greek -μός (-mós) Ancient Greek -ισμός (-ismós)der. English -ism English plagiarism From plagiary + -ism.
- derived from -ism English plagiarism From plagiary + -ism
- derived from *-āsjos Latin -āriusnom✻
- derived from plagium Proto-Indo-European *-yósder
Definitions
Copying of another person's ideas, text, or other creative work, and presenting it as…
Copying of another person's ideas, text, or other creative work, and presenting it as one's own, especially without permission; plagiarizing.
- Even if it's not illegal, plagiarism is usually frowned upon.
- Copy from one, it's plagiarism. Copy from two, it's research.
Text or other work resulting from this act.
- The novel was awash in plagiarism, with entire passages lifted verbatim.
The instance of plagiarism.
The neighborhood
- neighbormicroplagiarism
- neighborplagiarist
- neighborplagiarize
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for plagiarism. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA