if suppose you want to write a competitive book (only objective type)should we have to frame new questions?is there need of referencing these type of books ,and if we add some facts from any book.
First of all let me tell you that you must reframe the questions. If possible the reframing of questions must be fundamentally different from the other books. You can consider those books as reference books only. No chart or graph or any sort of literature be directly taken down.
It is necessary to be innovative and unique. Never attempt to write which is not created by you. Do not fall under any trap of legal intricacies.
You want to write a book on a particular non-fiction subject. There are already books on the subject. If your book is to compete with existing books, it will have to offer a new approach or something different to compete in the market. Otherwise nobody will buy it.
You are free to use general knowledge and generally known facts in your book without quoting. For example: "The year 2001 was the first year of the 21st century."
However, if you add in figures, facts, photos, data, tables, paraphrases, quotes or even ideas that are not well known, you have to state where they come from in your text and in your References. This avoids plagiarism. If any of the quotes or excerpts are long, you also have to get permission from the copyright owner in writing.
I agree with Prof. Ian. Direct quotes and use of sensitive materials cited already, need to be acknowledged for your work to meet ethical standards in scientific research.
First of all let me tell you that you must reframe the questions. If possible the reframing of questions must be fundamentally different from the other books. You can consider those books as reference books only. No chart or graph or any sort of literature be directly taken down.
It is necessary to be innovative and unique. Never attempt to write which is not created by you. Do not fall under any trap of legal intricacies.