No, that is called citing and that is best to do to avoid plagarism.
Plagiarism is when you use someone else's ideas or words without giving them credit. Forgetting to cite a source in your paper is considered plagiarism because you are not acknowledging where you got the information from.
If you do not put where you got the information from the you would be stealing(plagiarism).
As long as you cite your source, it is not considered plagiarism. But most teachers do not allow you to copy a page, even if you cite it.
Plagiarism is illegal because you are copying another person's words and using them as if they were your own. Therefore, you can copy and paste a quote or words to a document, and so forth, as long as you put quotation marks at the beginning and end of the quote or piece of writing, or you can put the source you got it from, and sometimes, if you want to, you can put who wrote the piece of writing you have supplied.
plagiarism, prism haha that's all i got
Yes
It Doesn't but it does keep you from getting arrested for plagiarism! Plagiarism is copying some one else's work without saying where you got it.
It depends on the situation and wording. Not when writing in a formal tone. Example: He got better at playing the piano. He showed improvement in his piano playing.
If you copy the words directly without change and do not attribute them in "quotation marks" to the source, it is plagiarism whether you cite sources or not. The important thing is not to pass off another person's work or words as your own work. To do research and to use this research in construction YOUR OWN work or words is a good thing to do but you must always reference (give due credit to) your research sources if you use them in building your work/words.
"Got to" can be considered informal or colloquial grammar, but it is commonly used in spoken English to mean "have to" or "must." It is important to use proper grammar in formal writing and professional communication, but in casual conversation, "got to" is widely accepted.
She got the idea from a dream which was the meadow scene. Then she got curious as to what happens then and she developed the characters. When the characters were made she said the story wrote itself almost. She does make reference to Romeo and Juliet and also to Wuthering Heights
she was very lonely so she started writing