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  2. Pleonasm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleonasm

    The "up" in "climb up" is not always redundant, as in the example "He climbed up and then fell down the mountain." Many other examples of pleonasm are redundant only if the speaker's knowledge is taken into account. For example, most English speakers would agree that "tuna fish" is redundant because tuna is a kind of fish.

  3. List of tautological place names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tautological_place...

    For example, in Russian, the format "Ozero X-ozero" (i.e. "Lake X-lake") is used. In English, it is usual to do the same for foreign names, even if they already describe the feature, for example Lake Kemijärvi (Lake Kemi-lake), Faroe Islands (literally Sheep-Island Islands, as øy is Modern Faroese for Island), or Saaremaa island (Island land ...

  4. Tautology (language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tautology_(language)

    This is related to the rhetorical device of hendiadys, where one concept is expressed through the use of two descriptive words or phrases: for example, using "goblets and gold" to mean wealth, or "this day and age" to refer to the present time. Superficially, these expressions may seem tautological, but they are stylistically sound because the ...

  5. Verbosity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbosity

    For example, Mark Twain (1835–1910) wrote "generally, the fewer the words that fully communicate or evoke the intended ideas and feelings, the more effective the communication." [ 25 ] Similarly Ernest Hemingway (1899–1961), the 1954 Nobel laureate for literature, defended his concise style against a charge by William Faulkner that he "had ...

  6. Reduplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduplication

    Of the above types, only shm-reduplication is productive, meaning that examples of the first three are fixed forms and new forms are not easily accepted. Comparative reduplication : In the sentence "John's apple looked redder and redder," the reduplication of the comparative indicates that the comparative is becoming more true over time ...

  7. Tautology (logic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tautology_(logic)

    The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein first applied the term to redundancies of propositional logic in 1921, borrowing from rhetoric, where a tautology is a repetitive statement. In logic, a formula is satisfiable if it is true under at least one interpretation, and thus a tautology is a formula whose negation is unsatisfiable.

  8. Redundancy (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redundancy_(linguistics)

    For example, the English phonemes /p/ and /b/ in the words pin and bin feature different voicing, aspiration, and muscular tension. Any one of these features is sufficient to differentiate /p/ from /b/ in English. [2] Generative grammar uses such redundancy to simplify the form of grammatical description. Any feature that can be predicted on ...

  9. RAS syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAS_syndrome

    RAS syndrome, where RAS stands for redundant acronym syndrome (making the phrase "RAS syndrome" autological), is the redundant use of one or more of the words that make up an acronym in conjunction with the abbreviated form. This means, in effect, repeating one or more words from the acronym.