Ed, Barry and Celeste,
I owe all of you an apology! I'm so sorry. Despite all the explanations given by all of you, I was suspicious as I cannot imagine that Ed would give the wrong reason. Instinct told me something had to be wrong at my end ... I just didn't know what it was.
After putting the article away for hours and looking at it again, I finally saw the links in the article. The reason for rejecting my article stands. I'm so embarrassed but, at least, I finally understand it!
Perhaps, I could explain what I did. Maybe, sometime in the future, someone else whose article gets rejected may be able to see/understand what might have happened in their article. In my article, I wanted to illustrate a point and chose to refer to a conversation between Mr. and Mrs. Bennet (from 'Pride and Prejudice'). I copied/pasted the conversation from a similar article I had written earlier. To make sure that I complied with the 12pt Times New Roman rule for the font to use, I just clicked Edit > Select All and proceeded to change the font; I aslo changed the colour of all the text to black. What I forgot was that some of the words like 'Netherfield' and 'Mr. Morris' (which were in blue in the previous article and, therefore, clearly visible) were linked to other websites. So, I did not see them when I checked and re-checked the article I prepared for CC.
If anything, I've learned my lesson. I'll be even more careful next time. But, as I said, I'm really sorry. Thank you all for your patience and trying to explain things to me. I do appreciate it.
Aneeta
question about rejection
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Re: question about rejection
Time away from articles generally reveals what we can't see right away. Thanks for sharing a valuable lesson.
Be careful about copying and pasting, even from your own articles, as you don't want to risk plagiarizing yourself or others. I'm sure yours was just a small quote that most likely fell under fair use and all, but use care (as you learned).
Be careful about copying and pasting, even from your own articles, as you don't want to risk plagiarizing yourself or others. I'm sure yours was just a small quote that most likely fell under fair use and all, but use care (as you learned).
Re: question about rejection
Aneeta. This did happen to me once and Ed told me there was an invisible link within my article. I finally worked out that what happened was because I had cut and pasted a couple of words from my research page, some of which had been copied in from other websites. I hadn't realised that the words I pasted (complicated names of a building or site in a foreign city) originally had a link with them.
Just thought I'd mention this in case you've done anything similar.
Just thought I'd mention this in case you've done anything similar.
Re: question about rejection
Jak,
This is similar to what happened to me. The only difference is that i copied from another article I'd written, not another website! Thank you for sharing this - it gives me comfort that I'm not the only one who did this!
Aneeta
This is similar to what happened to me. The only difference is that i copied from another article I'd written, not another website! Thank you for sharing this - it gives me comfort that I'm not the only one who did this!
Aneeta