Answer: Plagiarism.
Explanation:
While it is completely appropriate to draw on someone else's findings and conclusions in your work, it is punishable to present them as your own. Plagiarism happens when we use someone else's ideas without listing that individual as a source. It is considered as a serious breach of academic ethics.
It is not allowed to use other people's ideas without citing them, but it is also punishable to mix your own previous work with new without permission. This is known as <em>self-plagiarism</em>.
Answer:
You're first answer choice is the answer.
Explanation:
None of the other answer choices make much sense. This is the only one that makes sense.
Hope this helps! (:
Answer:
"whose" would be correct.
Explanation:
Who's is a contraction of "who + is" making it confusing if it were used in this sense.