Plagiarism check for any English text by splitting it into sentences and generating an exact-match Google search for each. Click each link to manually verify whether that sentence appears elsewhere on the web.
Real-time plagiarism detection requires either crawling the entire web (paid services like Copyscape, Turnitin) or maintaining a paid index. The free alternative is to use Google's web index manually — Google has already crawled most of the internet, and a quoted exact-match search reveals if your sentence appears anywhere indexed.
Paste your text. The tool splits it into sentences and generates an exact-phrase Google search for each (using quotes to force exact matching). Click each link to open a search and visually inspect whether the sentence appears elsewhere. If a sentence appears verbatim on multiple sites, that's plagiarism evidence.
Use it for academic submissions before turning them in, for content marketing pieces before publishing, for guest posts being submitted to other publications, and for verifying that AI-generated content isn't accidentally copied from training data.
For comprehensive plagiarism scanning use a paid tool like Copyscape ($5/month) or Turnitin (institutional). This free approach is best for spot-checking critical sentences. Long sentences are harder to plagiarise unintentionally — focus on short, punchy ones in your check.
Real plagiarism detection needs Google's full search index — a paid service. Manual verification is the most you can do free.
No — these are normal web searches, opened one at a time.
Yes — modern plagiarism includes paraphrased content from uncited sources.
Explore more plagiarism & ai detection on the tool hub — or jump straight to the AI Content Detector, ChatGPT Detector.