Students who use the exact words of an author are direct quoting
Actually, students who use the exact words of an author, with proper citation and quotation marks, are indeed quoting the author. This is a common practice in academic writing to give credit to the original source of information.
Using the author's exact words without credit is called plagiarism, or copying. In the US, it is against the law. Crediting the author, or putting it into your own words is perfectly fine.
Yes, it is acceptable to use an author's exact words as long as they are put in quotation marks and the author is credited. This is considered proper citation and gives credit to the original source.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
Exact quoting of an author should always be enclosed in quotation marks and cited. If you paraphrase, it does not need quotes. Fair use word count is something different than when to use quote marks.
Quotation marks should be used when indicating a patient's exact words on a medical record.
you can use for b
I DON'T KNOW (and actually the answer IS correct!)
Yes, these words all use the same letters.
The students recognized the words that were shown to them during their test.