Grammar
Plagiarism
Academic Writing
Bibliographies
Essays
100
This point-of-view uses pronouns such as "we" and "us."

First-person.

100

This plagiarist dropped out of the presidential race and later died, both arguably as a result of their plagiarism.

Herman Cain

100

The online book we use in this class, from which some of the midterm's material will derive.

The RoughWriter's Guide.

100

The minimum number of sources any given bibliography must have.

One.

100

The minimum number of paragraphs necessary for a typical academic essay.

Five.

200

The voice used in this very sentence.

Passive voice.

200

This online tool, while popularly used for brainstorming and "writing," is known as a plagiarism machine online due to its tendency to steal others' work without credit--before its users will then do the same to it.

AI.

200

While common in speech and informal writing, this grammatical device, which bridges multiple words into one, is unacceptable in academic writing.

Contractions.

200

A special type of line format you should use for the citation--but not the annotation.

Hanging indent.

200

This paragraph should not simply restate the intro or thesis.

Conclusion.

300

I should use this voice in my writing.

Active.
300

This type of writing, where a writer will craft their own story using someone else's characters and settings, often does not constitute plagiarism.

Fanfiction.

300

The point-of-view most common in academic writing, in part due to its overall objectivity.

Third-person.

300

The three things a proper annotation needs to have.

What, why, and how.

300

My term for analyzing an essay's structure to craft an outline.

Reverse-engineering.

400

This punctuation mark, while containing two other punctuation marks both common in bibliographies, will not itself appear in the typical bibliography.

Semicolon.

400

Despite not knowing she was plagiarizing at the time, she created one of the highest profile plagiarism scandals of the 2010s.

Melania Trump

400

This academic style is the most common in liberal arts and humanities, a category this class falls under.

MLA

400

The most important part of the bibliography, for organizing your citations.

Author.

400

This paragraph is also a common phenomenon in real life.

Introduction.

500

The name for the specific way you should write and capitalize your titles.

Titlecase.

500

This book plagiarized Harold Courlander's The African.

Alex Haley's Roots.

500

The most common structure for organizing academic writing.

Hourglass structure.

500

The name of a larger work the shorter work you're citing is in.

Container.

500

While common in research papers and the longer essays present in higher-level academic writing, you shouldn't expect to use these in rudimentary academic essays.

Sections and subheads.

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