One way to demonstrate academic integrity is to give credence and acknowledgement to the sources of your information.
For example:
You wrote a definition of a term. And you found that definition in a book authored by somebody. On you paper, you either write "According to the novel written by author, TERM is defined as..."
For example:
You are tasked to define the word "plagiarism".
To demonstrate academic integrity, you define plagiarism like this:
According to wikipedia, Plagiarism is <span>the "wrongful appropriation" and "stealing and publication" of another author's "language, thoughts, ideas, or expressions" and the representation of them as one's own original work.
Note that you have stated your source.
You can then add your own input and thought about the word. Like this:
I believe that plagiarism is an act of a lazy person. A person who pretends to be smart but in reality is just a parasite.
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The above lines are quoted from the poem ‘The Raven’ by Edgar Alan Poe. The poetic device used in the above lines is the metaphor. A metaphor is a literary device in which the thing is contemplated to be symbolic of something abstract.
In the above lines, the poet is sure that the raven is a messenger from hell, which is tormenting him about the death of Lenore.
“Take thy beak from out of my heart, and take thy form from off my door!”
The above line clearly states how much hurt the poet is. Metamorphically, Raven’s presence is tormenting him psychologically and physically.
The corrcet answer would be relational.
Answer:
The answer is event.
Explanation:
In a story, anything that happens to or is done by a character is called event. Events can change the direction of a story, the way characters are perceived by viewers or readers, the characters' being flat or complex... A story that has shallow events might be seen as boring. Events must be significant, otherwise the audience will see no reason to receive that information whatsoever and may even give up on the story for good.