It depends on what you do with the recipe. If you use it to cook from it, no, that is not plagiarism; but if you include it without acknowledgement in a presentation on recipes, that is plagiarism.
Plagiarism and copyright infringement.
Plagiarism.
Plagiarism
The exact meaning of plagiarism is defined as the stealing of another person's words and the use of those words as your own words. Taking a person's writing and passing it off as your own writing is called plagiarism.
It is plagiarism, according to this wikipedia definition I plagiarized off of the internet. Plagiarism is defined in dictionaries as "the wrongful appropriation, close imitation, or purloining and publication, of another author's language.
Plagiarism is taking another person's works or words and using them without permission. It is not legal in shape or form.
Plagiarism is the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own. Don't do that.
The same as everyone else: the practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own. Plagiarism is not defined in any Catholic dictionary or encyclopedia that I know of.
Get a recipe off of the internet but check to see if it's a decent website ;)
Not necessarily, but it could still be a copyright violation. Plagiarism is taking credit for someone's work or not giving proper attribution. But if you are copying to give away or sell without saying it is your original work, that is not plagiarism, but piracy.
The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own.
They both involve taking someone else's work, but while copyright infringement means you just take it, plagiarism means you take it and pass it off as your own. It is possible to plagiarize without violating copyright laws, just as it is possible to violate copyright laws without plagiarism.