|
DUPLICATED |
Copied |
|
APED |
Copied |
|
EMULATED |
Copied |
|
PIRATED |
Copied illegally |
|
|
TRACED |
Copied outline of |
|
CRIBBED |
Copied in exam (coll) |
|
CHEATED |
Copied in exam (coll) |
|
REPLICATED |
Replaced, it gets copied |
|
|
ROLEMODEL |
Someone to be copied |
|
HEAPED |
He copied, but got stacked |
|
MIMICKED |
Copied Mimi and shuffled deck |
|
IMITABLE |
Capble of being imitated or copied. |
|
PIE |
Savoury dish copied but omitted the fish |
|
DIVERSIFIED |
Policeman left divers, if copied, and branched out |
|
COPED |
Managed to shake off first person when copied |
|
EXCERPT |
An extract; a passage selected or copied from a book or
record. |
|
HYALOTYPE |
A photographic picture copied from the negative on
glass; a photographic transparency. |
|
ECTYPAL |
Copied, reproduced as a molding or cast, in
contradistinction from the original model. |
|
INCORRECTLY |
Not correctly; inaccurately; not exactly; as, a
writing incorrectly copied; testimony incorrectly stated. |
|
PORTRAITURE |
A portrait; a likeness; a painted resemblance; hence,
that which is copied from some example or model. |
|
TOQUE |
A kind of cap worn in the 16th century, and copied in modern
fashions; -- called also toquet. |
|
MECHANOGRAPHIC |
Written, copied, or recorded by machinery; produced
by mechanography; as, a mechanographic record of changes of
temperature; mechanographic prints. |
|
ORIGINAL |
Not copied, imitated, or translated; new; fresh; genuine;
as, an original thought; an original process; the original text of
Scripture. |
|
NATURAL |
Resembling the object imitated; true to nature; according
to the life; -- said of anything copied or imitated; as, a portrait is
natural. |
|
EXEMPLAR |
A model, original, or pattern, to be copied or imitated;
a specimen; sometimes; an ideal model or type, as that which an artist
conceives. |