Misfortune
A family that loses their home in a storm is experiencing misfortune.
<u>YES</u>
I experienced misfortune when I lost my five dollar bill on the way to the store.
Mistaken
It is possible for a woman to be mistaken for her Identical twin sister
<u>Yes</u>
I'm often mistaken for somebody else as we have the same features.
Superstition
The idea that Friday the 13th is an unlucky day is a common superstition
<u>Yes</u>
One superstition I have heard is that if a black cat crosses your path you will fall to bad-luck and will experience misfortune.
A superstition that I had was that if you broke a mirror you would be cursed for 7 years. This influenced me from a young age not to destroy any reflective surfaces as we had a lot of those in the house. I believed that my parents tried to influence me/ tell me at a young age was so that feared of one day falling into misfortune which luckily never happened. I started to finally not believe the superstition when I opened my locker and my mirror fell and was everywhere and weeks past and nothing bad happened.
Hoped this helped in some way,
Jon
Answer:
A, B, and E.
Explanation:
Plagiarism is stealing of the text without giving credit to the source.
Some type of common plagiarism:
- Complete Plagiarism: As in the case of Alan, who submitted a paper written by someone else without any citing or crediting the source.
- Misleading Citation: When someone use different types of resources and mistakenly cite wrong source. It comes in Misleading Citation or Source base Citation.
- Paraphrasing plagiarism: Means using someone else work and making some minor changes and crediting as own work.
- Accidental plagiarism: When citation style or format gets wrong.
- As in the case of Sam and Karen, Option B and E.