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Reword this? PLEASE =] i don't want to plagiarize and i'm having trouble putting it into different wording!?

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Throughout the novel, Jane struggles to find the right balance between moral duty and earthly pleasure, between obligation to her spirit and attention to her body. She encounters three main religious figures: Mr. Brocklehurst, Helen Burns, and St. John Rivers. Each represents a model of religion that Jane ultimately rejects as she forms her own ideas about faith and principle, and their practical consequences. Mr. Brocklehurst illustrates the dangers and hypocrisies of the nineteenth-century Evangelical movement. Mr. Brocklehurst adopts the rhetoric of Evangelicalism when he claims to be purging his students of pride, but his method of subjecting them to various privations and humiliations, like when he orders that the naturally curly hair of one of Jane’s classmates be cut so as to lie straight, is entirely un-Christian. Helen Burns’s meek and forbearing mode of Christianity, on the other hand, is too passive for Jane to adopt as her own, although she loves and admires Helen for it.Many chapters later, St. John Rivers provides another model of Christian behavior. His is a Christianity of ambition, glory, and extreme self-importance. St. John urges Jane to sacrifice her emotional deeds for the fulfillment of her moral duty, offering her a way of life that would require her to be disloyal to her own self.

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  1. First, if these are someones original ideas, then simply rewording them does not keep you out of plagiarism. Plagiarism applies more to the ideas than the words. If you are using someone else's ideas, you need to cite them anyway. Of course if they aren't original, but just obvious then there is no problem or need for citation, and you should have no difficulty saying it in your own words.

    Second, if you actually understand the quotation, just sit down at a computer, and type up the ideas (without looking at the quotation). If you can't, and you have to look at the quoatation, you probably don't really understand what it's saying, let alone agree with it. So it probably shouldn't be in your paper to begin with.  


  2. Sorry, just paraphrasing does NOT stop plagiarism. If you steal the IDEA, you're still stealing!

    Frankly this sounds like you picked it up off Sparknotes (or a similar site) and you're trying to get away with not reading the book.

  3. if someone re-words this for you, you're  still plagiarizing.

    cuz the person put it in THEIR words.

  4. Evangelical movement.the novel,St. John Rivers  to find theThroughout  right balance between moral duty and earthly pleasure, between obligation to her spirit and attention to her body. She encounters three main religious figures: Mr. Brocklehurst, Jane strugglesHelen Burnsof Evangelicalism when he claims to be purging his students of pride, but his method of subjecting them to various privations and humiliations, like when he orders that the, and . Each represents a model of religion that Jane ultimately rejects as she forms her own ideas about faith and principle, and their practical consequences. Mr. Brocklehurst illustrates the dangers and hypocrisies of the nineteenth-century . Mr. Brocklehurst adopts the rhetoric  naturally curly hair of one of Jane’s classmates be cuMany chapters later, St. John Rivers provides another model of Christian behavior. His is a Christianity of ambition, glory, and extreme self-importance. St. John urges Jane to sacrifice her emotional deeds for the fulfillment of her moral duty, offering her a way of life that would require her to be disloyal to her own self.t so as to lie straight, is entirely un-Christian. Helen Burns’s meek and forbearing mode of Christianity, on the other hand, is too passive for Jane to adopt as her own, although she loves and admires Helen for it.

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