You would need to be the rightsholder for the image (or license it), and the words would need to be reasonably short and property attributed.
No. Unless things have changed, the most accepted form of not breaking copyright with printed material is that up to 1 third of the material may be copied for reference purposes. Any more then that is breach of copyright. Why do you think it's called "Copyright" if any one is allowed to copy it entirely? The "right" to copy it remains with the copyright holder.
That is both copyright infringement and plagiarism.
No, the flag's design is not copyrighted.
I think is quite a big problem!
That would be a breach of copyright. No.
That would be a breach of copyright, which is illegal everywhere. WikiAnswers will not assist in any such breach, so no, we cannot.
You need to be able to prove the person breached the copyright of your material. They would be summoned to court - and you would have to provide proof the breach occurred. The judge would usually award damages against the defendant if your case is proven.
It is something that can be enforced through legal means if necessary, and fraudulent breach of copyright is a criminal offense in many countries.
Without a license, yes.
copying, lifting, pirating, stealing, illegal use, breach of copyright, bootlegging
When you use materials that are not entirely your own, for which you don't have an exception in the law, or for which you don't have permission.
If you got the copy off your friend, or from the internet, no. Any legal DVD will be found at a legitimate store and will have all of the proper features (labelling, a proper container, high-quality printed labels, etc.). Any other will be a breach of copyright.