Yes, but all Wikipedia content has a Creative Commons Share-Alike 3.0 license, so most uses do not require additional permission.
Not at all, the text is copyrighted as soon as it is written.
Yes, AT and T will count it as a text message if it reaches the recipient
Yes And No! Users Can Report that and the Supervisors or other members can remove the hole post. As long as the member uses this text it is not Copyrighted.
Paraphrasing a text is legal provided you site the original text to show where the concept or idea was origionally taken from.
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone was published in 1998. The text was previously released a year earlier under the title Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone and was copyrighted then.
Many modern translations of the New Testament are copyrighted by the publisher. Their translation of Jesus' words is therefore copyrighted. The text of the King James Version of the Bible is not copyrighted. Although study notes and translation notes on the same printed page may be.
"Articles" is the very first word, since it is in the title. The first word in the text is "To"
Such declarations being a public document, nobody could really claim ownership of them.
replace the Articles of Confederation? see page 182 of your text book
I'm not 100% sure but I am pretty sure so yes i think
The COUNT function will count all of the cells in a range that contain numbers. It will ignore blank cells and those containing text. The COUNTA function can be used to include cells that have text, but also excludes blank cells. So to count all the cells for A2 to A30 that have numbers in them, you would use the COUNT function like this: =COUNT(A2:A30)
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