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After all, the word plagiary once meant kidnapping.
However, it also was severely criticized as a plagiary of the Finnish epic poem Kalevala.
Schmidt had defended zu Guttenberg against the accusations of plagiary.
Franck, as we saw, called Walton 'a plagiary.'
Professor Thomas Brown wrote in the journal Plagiary that, "Every aspect of Churchill's tale is fabricated."
The concept of plagiarism, as the theft of ideas, predates the digital age by centuries, 'plagiary' having been used in the early 17th century.
If there were such a distinction, he says, "I don't think there is evidence in Oates's biography of Lincoln to indicate first-degree plagiary.
"Plagiary: Cross-disciplinary Studies in Plagiarism, Fabrication, and Falsification."
On or about 23 May 2002, a French missionary was arrested on blasphemy charges after distributing a pamphlet about Quranic plagiary.
"And even if you do find one instance - was that one a mistake or bad judgment one time, or is it a part of a pattern of plagiary?"
Sheridan later mocked Cumberland's sensitivity to criticism by modelling the character Sir Fretful Plagiary, in his 1779 play The Critic, after him.
In an article in the journal Plagiary, entitled "Did the US Army Distribute Smallpox Blankets to Indians?
Martha Issová participated in creating a plagiary of Sarah Silverman's election commercial in 2010, the plagiary is based on antigerontism.
D. H. Woodward, Thomas Fuller, the Protestant Divines, and Plagiary Yet Speaking, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society , Vol.
One of its major roles, Sir Fretful Plagiary, is a comment on the vanity of authors, and in particular a caricature of the dramatist Richard Cumberland who was a contemporary of Sheridan.
Fabrication and Falsification in Ward Churchill's Genocide Rhetoric" by Thomas Brown, published in "Plagiary: Cross-Disciplinary Studies in Plagiarism, Fabrication, and Falsification".