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单词 plagiarism
释义

Definition of plagiarism in English:

plagiarism

noun ˈpleɪdʒərɪz(ə)mˈpleɪdʒəˌrɪzəm
mass noun
  • The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own.

    there were accusations of plagiarism
    count noun it claims there are similar plagiarisms in the software produced at the university
    Example sentencesExamples
    • When that becomes an acceptable practice, other forms of plagiarism don't seem so out of line.
    • Practices that would not be considered to be plagiarism in a speech might be in a journalistic article.
    • Much ink and accusations of plagiarism have been spilled over the story's origins.
    • The accusations of plagiarism caught a lot of local and national media attention.
    • We end this week's Science Show with a reminder that there is a grand tradition of plagiarism in some places.
    • An accusation of plagiarism assumes not only that you can spot a repetition but that you know where originality lies.
    • Another main difference for me between now and then is that I no longer take plagiarism personally.
    • We have called him out several times on his blatant plagiarism in the Bahama Journal.
    • However not all accusations of plagiarism are deemed to be founded in fact.
    • He had no intention of letting some musical shark claim a share of his royalties and copyright fees on the strength of an accusation of plagiarism.
    • Towards the end, deception, fraud and plagiarism are laid bare.
    • Journalists don't have the monopoly on plagiarism, nor are they the worst offenders.
    • Genuinely unaware of my plagiarism, I appear to have stolen this idea from Stuart.
    • It is especially so when such papers are tainted with plagiarism and dirty school politics.
    • These exchanges were seen as a healthy part of the distribution of information, not a form of piracy or plagiarism.
    • Students are particularly vulnerable to dangerous practices such as plagiarism.
    • There have been some charges of plagiarism on account of this reference which to my mind are spurious and nonsensical.
    • The judge has already said that, although there are similarities between book and film, they do not appear to amount to plagiarism.
    • It can be used to find more sophisticated cases of plagiarism or intellectual property theft.
    • Anyone with that academic background knows the serious consequences of plagiarism of words and ideas.
    Synonyms
    copying, infringement of copyright, piracy, theft, stealing, poaching, appropriation
    informal cribbing

Derivatives

  • plagiarist

  • noun ˈpleɪdʒərɪstˈpleɪdʒ(ə)rəst
    • I often wonder what journalism's legendary scribes would say about this year's crop of liars, plagiarists, and incompetents.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He has inspired imitators, tolerated plagiarists and confounded the computer geeks who try in vain to turn his craft into software.
      • He was a great borrower, but he didn't borrow like a plagiarist, he borrowed to change things according to his need.
      • Meanwhile, the hit parade of plagiarists and liars turning their moral shortcomings into cold, hard cash continues.
      • Unlike the countless self-pitying plagiarists who have followed in his wake, his was not simply another all-American whine.
  • plagiaristic

  • adjectivepleɪdʒəˈrɪstɪkˌpleɪdʒəˈrɪstɪk
    • A more plagiaristic reworking of the Doors’ ‘Riders on the Storm’ I have yet to hear.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • By all accounts, he should not have been allowed near a camera after this plagiaristic mess.
      • Which means, of course, that the folks at Shanghai Daily aren't really a bunch of unoriginal plagiaristic copycats.
      • Unless of course I merely forgot I'd heard it and it slowly burrowed its way back into my conscious, furtively enough to avoid plagiaristic suspicion and think, for one small, precious moment, that it might have been mine.
      • I've got no compunction about being plagiaristic.

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin plagiarius 'kidnapper' (from plagium 'a kidnapping', from Greek plagion) + -ism.

  • This term for taking someone's ideas and passing them off as one's own is from Latin plagiarius ‘kidnapper’. The Latin poet Martial (ad 40–c.102) used the term in one of his poems for a literary thief.

 
 

Definition of plagiarism in US English:

plagiarism

nounˈplājəˌrizəmˈpleɪdʒəˌrɪzəm
  • The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own.

    there were accusations of plagiarism
    count noun it claims there are similar plagiarisms in the software produced at the university
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We end this week's Science Show with a reminder that there is a grand tradition of plagiarism in some places.
    • Genuinely unaware of my plagiarism, I appear to have stolen this idea from Stuart.
    • Anyone with that academic background knows the serious consequences of plagiarism of words and ideas.
    • An accusation of plagiarism assumes not only that you can spot a repetition but that you know where originality lies.
    • These exchanges were seen as a healthy part of the distribution of information, not a form of piracy or plagiarism.
    • Practices that would not be considered to be plagiarism in a speech might be in a journalistic article.
    • The accusations of plagiarism caught a lot of local and national media attention.
    • We have called him out several times on his blatant plagiarism in the Bahama Journal.
    • There have been some charges of plagiarism on account of this reference which to my mind are spurious and nonsensical.
    • Students are particularly vulnerable to dangerous practices such as plagiarism.
    • When that becomes an acceptable practice, other forms of plagiarism don't seem so out of line.
    • Much ink and accusations of plagiarism have been spilled over the story's origins.
    • Another main difference for me between now and then is that I no longer take plagiarism personally.
    • Journalists don't have the monopoly on plagiarism, nor are they the worst offenders.
    • The judge has already said that, although there are similarities between book and film, they do not appear to amount to plagiarism.
    • He had no intention of letting some musical shark claim a share of his royalties and copyright fees on the strength of an accusation of plagiarism.
    • However not all accusations of plagiarism are deemed to be founded in fact.
    • Towards the end, deception, fraud and plagiarism are laid bare.
    • It can be used to find more sophisticated cases of plagiarism or intellectual property theft.
    • It is especially so when such papers are tainted with plagiarism and dirty school politics.
    Synonyms
    copying, infringement of copyright, piracy, theft, stealing, poaching, appropriation

Origin

Early 17th century: from Latin plagiarius ‘kidnapper’ (from plagium ‘a kidnapping’, from Greek plagion) + -ism.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/24 2:07:57