![]() While the move is not a direct shot at Turnitin, PlagScan, UniCheck and other academic anti-plagiarism tools, it is a shot across the bow at Grammarly, which has offered similar functionality for Word for years. In addition to the similarity checker, Microsoft Editor will also help make rewrite suggestions and include recommendations for improving clarity, grammar and inclusiveness. However, Microsoft recently announced that Word would be getting it’s first built-in plagiarism checker.Ī part of their Microsoft Editor package, the new similarity detection tool will use Microsoft’s Bing search engine to detect duplicate text and automatically add citations and change formats to help give the appropriate attribution. ![]() However, up until now, that’s required the use of third-party services and plugins. ![]() Users of Microsoft Word have long been able to check their work for plagiarism and similarity issues.
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