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A quote of any length may violate copyright law unless you give full credit to the cartoon and to Disney. Use quote marks for the quote plus in () write Source, Cartoon, and Disney. There are very stringent laws against plageurism. If this quote is to be used in a paper that you are writing, or to be used to make a profit, then be very careful how it will be used. Example: You want to sell t-shirts that have Cartoon Characters with a quote on them.

2006-07-20 18:41:00 · answer #1 · answered by Schona 6 · 0 0

A short quotation would certainly be fair use. even a longer one might be, depending on the nature of the use, including whether it was for commercial purposes or not.

It is even possible that the work in question is no longer under copyright, though it isn't likely, with Disney.

(P.S. -- attributing the source of a quotation addresses the academic and journalistic question of plagiarism, but if the issue is copyright and fair use law, attributing the quotation is irrelevant. )

2006-07-20 18:28:09 · answer #2 · answered by C_Bar 7 · 0 0

Give the credit to Walt

2006-07-20 18:26:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

undoubtedly it is under copyright. give it the full reqiured attribution. you may want to ask a librarian how to phrase it if you haven't ever done it before.

2006-07-20 18:38:04 · answer #4 · answered by de bossy one 6 · 0 0

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