If you give credit in your own writing, it's not plagiarism.
I assume you really mean someone else's IDEAS, not IDEALS.
Claiming someone else's work to be your own is known as plagiarism. It involves copying or using someone else's creative work, such as writing, artwork, or music, without giving proper credit to the original creator. Plagiarism is considered unethical and can lead to legal consequences.
No, plagiarism is not making up information. Plagiarism is when someone uses someone else's work, ideas, or words without giving proper credit. Making up information is a form of fabrication or falsification.
Plagiarism is using someone elses answer, idea or writing and claiming it as your own knowing it is not your work or not giving the original writer credit.
Plagiearism is dishonest because you are claiming someone elses work as your own. THis is basically intelletual theft.
Accepting credit for someone else's work is an example of plagiarism, which is the act of presenting someone else's work as your own without proper attribution or permission. Plagiarism is considered a serious ethical violation in academic and professional settings.
The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own.
If you acknowledge the source it is quoting or citing; if you pretend the wording is your own it is plagiarism.
I assume you are asking the difference between plagiarism & copyright infringement. While both are essentially the use of someone elses work without permission, the most significant difference is that plagiarism also involves claiming that material as your own work.
Generally speaking, no. Copying someone elses work is not allowed. You may cite, or quote, others in you own work but to simply copy is plagiarism.
Plagiarism is using someone elses answer, idea or writing and claiming it as your own knowing it is not your work or not giving the original writer credit.
If you do it without their permission and without acknowledging them, presenting it as your own work, it is called plagiarism. If you do acknowledge them, then it can be called quoting or citing them or referencing them.
Walking a mile in someone elses shoes.