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Discover Ludwig'plagiarist' is a correct and usable word in written English
It refers to someone who presents someone else's work or ideas as their own without giving credit or permission. Example: The professor accused her student of being a plagiarist after submitting an essay that was almost identical to an article found online.
Dictionary
plagiarist
noun
One who plagiarizes; or purloins the words, writings, or ideas of another, and passes them off as his or her own, thus engaging in plagiarism; a literary thief; a plagiary.
Exact(60)
They want to raise taxes; she does not.Mr Steinbrück reaches for every available metaphor to paint Mrs Merkel as a plagiarist lacking any conviction.
Six months later it sold the business to Groupon, the American original, for Groupon shares then worth nearly $126m.Being branded a plagiarist clearly irks Oliver Samwer, the most active of the three sons of a Cologne lawyer who run Rocket.
But in the end he found the plagiarist, through a lawyer, only to be offered $100 in compensation, and a whining apology.Copyright and self-defence are not the only protection for authors.
A plagiarist, by contrast, tries to pass off another writer's words as his own.
Let no one else's work evade your eyesMar 14th 2002 American intellectuals: The new phrenologyFeb 7th 2002 Larry Summers v Cornel West: Seeing crimsonJan 3rd 2002 The next societyNov 1st 2001The hunt is now on for the next serial plagiarist.
Meanwhile, in Poetaster (1601) Jonson represented Marston as an inferior poet and a plagiarist; he also extended the attack to Dekker, satirized as a hack playwright.
A frank plagiarist, he depended for his success on his lively lyrics and his sparkling dialogue.
But Philo is hardly a plagiarist; he made modifications in Plato's theories.
1771 Barbados, West Indies William Lauder, (died 1771, Barbados, West Indies), Scottish literary forger, known for his fraudulent attempt to prove Milton a plagiarist.
Writer Jonah Lehrer first learned he had been rumbled, as a plagiarist and fabricator, from a voicemail.
Any professional politician is a plagiarist, in the Oxford Dictionary sense of "pass[ing] off someone else's words as one's own".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com