Copying is already a verb.
Other verbs are copy, copies and copied, depending on the tense.
Here are some example sentences:
"I need to copy this down".
"I need to take copies of this".
"She copied her friend".
"She was accused of copying the brainiest kid in the class".
In the phrase 'was copying,' there are no adverbs. There are no adverbs because it only has a verb in it.
"Was copying " doesn't contain an adverb, it is only a verb (or simple predicate).
Future tense can be one of the following: going to + verb = going to copy -- I am going to copy my sister and get married when I am 35. will + verb = will copy -- I will copy the recipe for you later. be + present participle -- am/is/are copying -- She is copying her passport for the travel agency.
A verb, as in "Copying answers blindly off the Internet may disqualify you."
The correct spelling of the action is plagiarism (copying someone else's material).The verb form is to plagiarize.
Yes, the word copy is a verb (copy, copies, copying, copied). The word copy is also a noun (copy, copies).Example uses:Verb: I can copy my transcript at the library.Noun: I have to send a copy with my application.
The sentence is an imperative sentence, the implied subject is 'you'. The subject 'you' should take the simple present of the verb, 'minimize'. A comma should separate 'if possible' from the rest of the sentence. The correct sentence is: Minimize copying by conveying documents digitally, if possible.
I think copying is not cheating forever.
No, copying the dictionary is not plagiarism.
plagiarism=without their permission
Of course it would. If you are copying your C Drive onto an external drive, then are copying it to an external drive, aren't you?
Legal copying is licensed by the copyright holder, and software piracy is copying without permission.