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Ah, like "The leaves of the plant are short and spiky." Very limited ways to rephrase that and keep the sam meaning, moreso if the leaves are described with a technical term like "rugose". Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 8.5% of all FPs. 19:22, 1 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
"The plant has short, spiky leaves." It's exceedingly rare that I've written a sentence that exactly matches a source (I'm thinking of one case that was "[subject] attended [long university name]"). Anyway, maybe the point is that close paraphrasing and copyright violations are only properties of a whole text, not a property of a single clause or few words. — Bilorv (talk) 19:52, 2 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Point, though think it's harder to invent these kind of things. But think the idea matters more than the example: there are some very basic phrasings that are likely to be maintained because that's just how you say that kind of fact. "He died in 1897 in London." or something like "He was born in 1850. His father was an electrician.". Simple declarative statements. Adam Cuerden (talk)Has about 8.5% of all FPs. 07:41, 4 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]
You can also run WP:AWB on an article, and it will combine duplicate references if other named references are used in an article. Headbomb {t · c · p · b} 20:32, 1 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]