From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishplagiarizepla‧gia‧rize (also plagiarise British English) /ˈpleɪdʒəraɪz/ ●○○ verb [intransitive, transitive] COPYto take words or ideas from another person’s work and use them in your work, without stating that they are not your own He accused other scientists of plagiarizing his research.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
plagiarize• Let me tell you what really bothers me about that brigand more than his plagiarizing.• Of course, if you feel entrepreneurial you can always plagiarize a few smart ideas from abroad and apply them locally.• He got kicked out of school because he plagiarized a term paper.• Kelty was expelled from the college for plagiarizing a term paper.• In this ethnographic imperialism if in no other way, the cultures anthropologists study and plagiarize gain their revenge.• She claimed that she didn't plagiarize - she just paraphrased.• Tried not to plagiarize too flagrantly.