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OpenStudy (anonymous):

Can someone wright me a 5 line example of a syntax poem?

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

no, but i can explain it

OpenStudy (anonymous):

why not give an example

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/glossaryItem.do?id=8061 An example of syntax in poetry will be the order of the words and how they are used. It is common for a poet will fracture a syntex to make the poetry more interesting. A poet using syntax in order would say, 'See the blue sky'. A fractured syntax is, 'The blue sky, I see. ~ask

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

which is considered plagiarism taking someone elses work just saying

OpenStudy (anonymous):

do, do*

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Not unless you have permission from the writer.

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

having someone do your work for you is WRONG. Guess what!!! Administration from MANY schools are on here. THEY WILL FAIL PEOPLE.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Maybe, but perhaps they just say that to scare students.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Nope, it's true. Happened to me.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I never said I was going to use it.

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

Mods can see things you delete just saying

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Which you would use for your own work. That is called Plagiarism, especially when someone says they don't want you using it.

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

And you did say you'd take it

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I saw that as well.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Occasionally a god speaks to you, rutted tollway a flint knife breaching gutted fields hung on event horizon, clear cut contradiction through soybeans and sheared corn: blue pickup an orange blaze, white letters blistered, boiling down to tarmac, asphalt, sulfur fume cured by a methane gas burn-off pipe, blue flame chipped with white raising a buttress of weather -burnt bricks, flaking wind totem. We stopped to take some cargo on, weighted October with a freight of waiting snow traveling east, panic of starlings startled from stubble husks by a harvest moon dangled directly ahead: drove into the pitted sphere, bloody pearl punched in a sky just out of reach (vanishing point retreating, peeling), one of the yellowed streetlights by now, dimming, diminishing. The road says to perspective, wait. An example of a Syntax Poem by Reginald Shepherd. ^

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

xD I know what it means you bum

OpenStudy (anonymous):

You only wanted 5 lines for an example, so read only the first 5.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

pla·gia·rism ˈplājəˌrizəm/Submit noun 1. The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own without the creators knowledge.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Thank you Yuba...

OpenStudy (anonymous):

He actually searched it ^ ._.

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

Wow lol, and anything you do copy that didn't come from you is considered plagiarism to schools ^_^

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

annnnnnnnd when you copy and post something you need to provide where it came from even if it's a definition

OpenStudy (e.mccormick):

Even if you have permission, it is still plagiarism. It is just not copyright infringement. Plagiarism is to use without giving credit. Copyright infringement is to use without getting permission and for a purpose not covered under the fair use clause.

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

*cookie for you* :P

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

^

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

Arrow of shame U_U

OpenStudy (e.mccormick):

You can even plagiarize without using the same language. If you use the same argument and order of presentation, you can be failed for plagiarism. http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/plagiarism/

OpenStudy (anonymous):

BY THE WAY, not to sound annoying or anything, but it is Write*, not wright.

OpenStudy (jagatuba):

Plagiarism is the act of using someone else's work as your own or not citing the source of your information, EVEN IF YOU HAVE PERMISSION. It is an act that a school or other institution would take action against, but not the source. IP (intellectual property) or copyright infringement is using someone else's work as your own or without their permission (although defining it as such is over simplification) and is an act that the owner of the IP would take action against, but not necessarily a school or institution. IP infringement is against the law and can land you with huge fines and in some cases jail time. Plagiarism is against your school's honor code and can land you with failed grades and in many cases suspension or expulsion. Either one is against the OpenStudy Code of Conduct and Terms and Conditions and will get you suspended from this site.

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

^ thank you @jagatuba and @e.mccormick

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

Boo, I already gave my cookie to e.mccormick D:

OpenStudy (jagatuba):

@beccaboo333 gets the cookie because she is the only one who really answered the question (without cheating I might add).

OpenStudy (beccaboo333):

:D THANKS!!!

OpenStudy (the_fizicx99):

Well then >.>

OpenStudy (e.mccormick):

People forget that OpenStudy is a private entity. Like all such creations, it gets to make its own set of rules that need to be followed as long as they do not conflict with the laws. For example, we don't allow the use of the site for cheating. People say, "Hey! I am in the USA! I can say what I want! First amendment! So you can't stop me!" Well, they need to go and read what it actually says. "Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;" OpenStudy is not Congress. It is a private entity. That means it is fully within our legal rights to regulate what is said and published on the web site. One of the things that OpenStudy chooses to proscribe is the use of unethical devices in education. This includes, but is not limited to, test swapping, plagiarism, and copyright violations.

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