It depends what the book is, how much you need to copy, and what you're copying it for.
Quotations should go after the period at the end of the sentence when copying a sentence from a book.
Just like a book or a movie, computer software can be owned. If you copy it without permission from the owner, you are violating their ownership rights and effectively stealing a copy of it.
I think new moon would be ok but ask you parents permission before you read this book or the rest of the books, I have read the hole serries and its not a g-rated book
Basically, yes. They made books like the Book of Kells and other books.
If the book is still protected by copyright, yes, you would need permission to create a derivative work. You will want to agree beforehand as to where the rights in the translation will lie.
No, copying other people works into your own (without acknowledging this) is called plagiarism.
This is likely to be considered a derivative work, which would require permission from the producers of Blockbusters. Even though your project is not for profit, you may wish to talk to an attorney.
A photograph of a statue would be considered a derivative work; if the statue is protected by copyright, you would need permission from the rightsholder to create the derivative work.
i would pay him royalty and disclose the purpose of usage of information of his book.
It depends on the type and distribution of the project, the extent of the copying, the nature of the book, and more. For most educational uses, limited copying is considered fair, but this isn't necessarily a given.
When a book is very famous and liked by a lot of people then a director will talk to the writer of the book and would ask for his permission and make a movie out of it.
by permission from author and publisher