Is an admittedly copied answer which does not add any useful detail (that just adds noise) an answer?
Technically yes, because it still answers (or attempts to answer) the question. Whether said "answer" is fit for purpose does not come into consideration.
This is not how things were in the past; previously the Not An Answer flag was intended, used and actioned as "this is not a useful answer". However, since Stack Exchange Inc. deemed deleting low-quality content as "not nice", the definition of NAA was narrowed to make it almost useless except for the most obvious cases (spam etc.). The end result is that instead of being able to flag low-quality content with three clicks (flag, NAA, OK) you now have to flag, moderator intervention, type a helpful description, OK - which is more work, which discourages flagging, which lowers deletion rates, which aligns perfectly with the goals of SE Inc.
I'm certain someone will attempt to contradict the previous paragraph with the standard party line, which is "the moderator UI for handling NAA flags doesn't provide sufficient context when something looks like a real answer". The counterpoint is that if something looks like a real answer, but someone has taken the time to flag it as not an answer, isn't it your duty as a moderator to investigate fully by examining the question in hand with all its answers, in order to obtain context? If someone raises a custom flag, a moderator has to investigate that fully anyway to determine whether the claim made by the flagger is actually correct - hence the workflow would appear to be identical in either case, making the extra effort required to raise "custom NAA flags" appear like nothing more than a hoop-jumping exercise (but again, this is exactly as SE Inc. intends).
It's also appropriate to note that SE Inc. has continually refused to update its moderation tools to allow moderators to have the context they require at hand, instead of having to manually inspect each question. This is not mere neglect, but a conscious choice made by the company in order to make moderators' lives more difficult, so they are less likely to accept flags and hence delete low-quality content.
Similarly, the description text for the NAA flag in the dialog box is still for the original, broad interpretation of that flag - inviting you to use it for cases when it's not appropriate by the now-very-narrow definition, so that your flag is more likely to be rejected.