Redundant Sentence Examples

redundant
  • Please stop me if I become redundant or boorish.

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  • The redundant lyrics made the song very boring.

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  • This method is universally applicable where there are no redundant members.

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  • On this latter view we may regard the tusks of the male babirusa as examples of redundant development, analogous to that of the single pair of lower teeth in some of the beaked whales.

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  • You're starting to sound redundant, don't you have anything new to say?

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  • Her words always seem redundant to me, she repeats everything.

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  • Most of the communication in this office has become redundant; it is not contributing to productivity.

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  • He was assisted, from about 1463 onwards, by his disciple and continuator, Jean Molinet, whose rhetorical and redundant style may be fairly traced in some passages of the Chronique.

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  • Verse 19 is metrically redundant, and the last clauses do not agree with what follows.

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  • Don't use such a redundant point in your debate.

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  • I'm afraid that computers and technology will make many jobs redundant in the coming years.

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  • It appears to be redundant for him to own so many vehicles.

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  • Her redundant language is making her sound verbose.

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  • My mother is never redundant; listen closely, because she will never say anything twice.

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  • Now, whatever its value in the past, epidemiology today is a largely redundant science.

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  • Our biggest concern was having to make staff redundant.

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  • Although redundant, the wallower was left on the upright shaft.

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  • Data Centers offer redundant power, lightning-fast fiber connections and 24X7X365 support from a staff with more than a decade of networking experience.

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  • I went into the redundant and dilapidated church and as I looked round the dusty ruins my eye lighted on an old red hassock.

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  • In Scotland only 57% of households said they would be prepared if the main wage earner were to be made redundant.

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  • Let a frame (without redundant members), and the external forces which keep it in equilibrium, be represented by a diagram constituting one of these two plane figures, then the lines in the other plane figure or the reciprocal will represent in direction and magnitude the forces between the joints of the frame, and, consequently, the stress on each member, as will now be explained.

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  • The following simple rules, laid down by a Committee of the Royal Geographical Society, will be found sufficient as a rule; according to this system the vowels are to be sounded as in Italian, the consonants as in English, and no redundant letters are to be introduced.

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  • If there are no redundant members in the frame there will be only two members abutting at the point of support, for these two members will be sufficient to balance the reaction, whatever its direction may be; we can therefore draw two triangles, each having as one side the reaction YX, and having the two other sides parallel to these two members; each of these triangles will represent a polygon of forces in equilibrium at the point of support.

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  • First, if the three intersections by the line infinity are all distinct, we have the hyperbolas; if the points are real, the redundant hyperbolas, with three hyperbolic branches; but if only one of them is real, the defective hyperbolas, with one hyperbolic branch.

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  • His thorough knowledge of the Servian language led him to reform the Cyrillic alphabet, in which several letters were redundant and certain sounds of the spoken language were unrepresented.

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  • Any complement would have been redundant, anyway.

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  • Now in the war's aftermath they had masses of redundant aircraft with a seemingly endless supply of spares.

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  • Franci ' s 447 x 480 41K The redundant apostrophe is the only reason for this picture's presence.

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  • In redundant sensor configurations, common cause failure becomes the dominant failure scenario.

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  • The 130-acre site was, until recently, mostly redundant dockland.

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  • Does anyone have any of these items, perhaps lying around in the shed or garage, completely redundant?

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  • For no amount of money will ever render these issues redundant.

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  • The content seems to become redundant near the end of the first third of the book.

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  • It is unduly florid and redundant in style, but it supplies us with the fullest account of the emperor's antecedents, and of his policy during the first two years and a half of his rule.

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  • Any redundant omentum is also placed near the small bowel anastomosis.

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  • Cathedrals in Scotland became redundant with the abolition of Scottish bishoprics.

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  • It should be noted that CloseView feature is redundant since most SuperMac cards already have a faster zooming feature built-in.

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  • The protein subunits in a virus capsid are multiply redundant, i.e. present in many copies per particle.

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  • This triple boot has an integral gaiter and heat retaining inner sole which makes cumbersome overboots redundant.

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  • Steps must now be taken by the Home Office to make child and teenage street gangs redundant before it is too late.

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  • Redundant panels with the description ` still-life ' or ` reclining nude ' are to be destroyed in good time.

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  • Yes, I suppose the these comparisons can get rather odious, or as you say " redundant " .

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  • The flags are not orthogonal, in that more restrictive flags will often make less restrictive ones redundant.

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  • The council have also begun the process of making the three UNISON branch officers compulsorily redundant, by putting them on the redeployment register.

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  • It has, anyhow, become somewhat redundant through the invention of photography.

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  • Personally, for convenience and cost, I'm amazed it hasn't rendered dating in Dallas utterly redundant.

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  • It is agreed the buildings are genuinely redundant for agricultural purposes, and the Parish Council is in support of this proposed use.

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  • Redundant Churches Some churches in very small villages have been declared redundant Churches Some churches in very small villages have been declared redundant.

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  • The pigs sensitive snouts, designed for rooting, are rendered redundant.

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  • Therefore starting a series of articles here in Linux Focus seems redundant.

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  • The Welsh Mirror type is a 45 year old redundant steelworker from Splott.

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  • Redundant mills are being converted into ' luxury waterside apartments ' .

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  • Now the later dramas are often notoriously awkward and redundant; while the removal of those convenient operatic devices which symbolize situations instead of developing them, does not readily appear to be compensated for by any superior artistic resource.

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  • A frame of this second type is said to have one redundant member.

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  • All the experiments yet made concur to prove that these two masses will not possess the same electric state ....The redundant electricities in the masses under consideration will be unequally distributed; the plate A will have about ninety-nine parts, and the plate C one; and, for the same reason, the revolving plate B will have ninety-nine parts of the opposite electricity, and the ball D one.

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  • There are 11 redundant nuclear-powered submarines stored in Britain.

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  • Do they have redundant servers at multiple physical sites?

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  • If all of the product manufacturers, building contractors and homeowners incorporate environmentally sound practices and products into their building, the idea of a green build conference will seem redundant.

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  • Decide beforehand what you're going to say and check with the other speakers to make sure that your content isn't going to be redundant.

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  • Redundant employees are still eligible for benefits if they meet the qualifications.

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  • This eliminates redundant clothing and gives the soldier more flexibility to have the right clothing for the right circumstances.

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  • Collective redundancy A collective redundancy is where 20 or more employees are to be made redundant within a 90-day period.

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  • Personally, for convenience and cost, I 'm amazed it has n't rendered dating in Dallas utterly redundant.

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  • Employers were allowed to avoid the obligation to inform or consult if fewer than 20 people were made redundant at any one establishment.

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  • For many years, Watermeadow Barn was a redundant farm barn.

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  • Reports of decisions of the Industrial Tribunal in matters relating to Redundancy Payments Act 1965 and the entitlement of redundant miners to redundancy payment.

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  • They have now opened dialog with the National Trust over the possibility of a joint scheme using a redundant second floor building.

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  • St Sampson 's Social Center for the Over 60's St Sampson 's was a redundant church in the center of York.

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  • Make redundant the things, the things you have wasted.

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  • So, I would be reluctant to declare the concept of ' intention ' redundant in case we thereby reified texts.

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  • My current Venetian series draws from fading palatial facades, stenciled door numbers and redundant markings on the walls of ancient workspaces.

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  • At a stroke, it can render all manner of utilities installed on your system redundant.

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  • Redundant mills are being converted into ' luxury waterside apartments '.

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  • This is more annoying than the redundant combat, boring NPC characters, and the game's flimsy storyline combined.

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  • Cropped bobs may seem redundant, but they differ slightly from the traditional bob.

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  • Some of them may seem a bit redundant, but they honestly are necessary.

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  • A sarong would be redundant unless you wear it long for evening, but if you're feeling self-conscious about being more covered up than some of the others, add some bling!

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  • It is simply too expensive for governments to explore space with countless millions of dollars spent on redundant systems and R&D.

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  • For some, the term "risque leather lingerie" is redundant.

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  • His aliens were vintage Giger, creepy slime-covered behemoths with redundant and inventive appendages and bio-based architecture.

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  • Kenneth Branagh's portrayal of Professor Gilderoy Lockhart was flawless and while some of his scenes were among the redundant, his performance was not.

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  • The next page seems a little redundant after the first, asking for your display name.

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  • Learning the color codes for HTML may seem a bit redundant in this drag-and-drop, what-you-see-is-what-you-get web 2.0 world, but like any knowledge, understanding color codes can be an added bit of power in your web toolkit.

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  • There is little doubt that some redundant narratives in the Ring were of earlier conception than the four complete dramas, and that their survival is due partly to Wagner's natural affection for work on which he had spent pains, and partly to a dim notion that (like Browning's method in The Ring and the Book) they might serve to reveal the story afresh in the light of each character.

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