0 present participle of copy --
1 to produce something so that it is the same as an original piece of work: --
2 to behave, dress, speak, etc. in a way that is intended to be like someone else, for example, because you admire that person: --
3 If you copy and paste something on a computer screen, you move it from one area to another. --
Choreographers borrowed the plots, characters and usually the titles of the original works, copying much of the action scene by scene.
Through aural copying and improvising these girls were developing vocal and musical skills.
Since the copying order is not known, no assumptions can be made about the order of the new remembered set entries.
Not surprisingly, nearly 40% of total parsing time is spent in the unifier, and another 45% in feature structure copying.
A further base is a theorem on the correctness of copying parts of concrete terms.
I have found no examples of intrusive vowels copying over non-guttural obstruents.
Using a virtual keyboard also eliminates any bias towards copying offered by users' familiarity with touch typing.
In other words, culture preceded and selected for vocal variation and vocal copying, which in turn enhanced the development of traditions.