Answers + Explanation:
1 - D (They are called indefinite because there is no clearly defined antecedent).
2 - E (While they look exactly like reflexive pronouns, intensive pronouns do not affect the meaning and are only used for emphasis).
3 - G (Interrogative sentences or phrases are, simply put, questions).
4 - B (Adjectives, i.e., noun-modifiers that can also be used as pronouns, e.g. "this" is an adjective in "take this bag" and a pronoun in "take this").
5 - A (<em>Each other</em> and <em>one another</em> are the only reciprocal pronouns in English and you use them when an action is mutual).
6 - C (Identifying relative pronouns is essential to understand relative clauses).
7 - F (You make a compound pronoun by adding -self to the object pronoun when the subject of an action and the object are the same).
To contrast two ideas, a writer could use transitions such as: On the other hand, However, Yet, Though, Nonetheless, On the contrary, But, and Otherwise. I hope I was helpful to you :)
Answer: It’s Alan
Explanation:
Plagiarism is the act of using someone else’s ideas and pasting them off as their own. Even though someone like Karen may have forgotten to add citations, reading her essay would make it very clear that she is adding in her own ideas; she just forgot to add in the sources of which she tried to find information from. Alan didn’t do any work and tried to pass off the whole essay as his own. He did so on purpose too.
No don’t give them credit because you can change things on Wikipedia so it’s not really real facts and you shouldn’t sue Wikipedia anyway because it’s kinda like a scam it’s not always real facts
In 2014 plagiarism detection can seem like a purely technological affair. Between amazing technologies to detect text, images, audio and video copying, it seems like anyone should be able to put a work through a supercomputer and learn whether or not it’s plagiarized.
However, human intuition and instinct still play as big of a role as technology in spotting plagiarism.
Part of this is because, despite how far technology has advanced, there are still types of plagiarism that computers can’t spot. However, even in cases where plagiarism can be detected by a machine, there’s often too much content to feed everything into the available tools. As such, having a good idea on what to check can be very useful.
So what are some of the signs that a work might have a plagiarism issue? There are actually dozens of potential tip offs and we discussed three common ones in academic environments in 2011.
However, here are five potential red flags that you can look for when checking out a piece of text. Though these aren’t outright convictions of plagiarism, they might make a work worth a deeper look.