What is Tautology?
1.
saying the same thing twice over in different words
Some people think this is an example of tautology:
It would be easy to find a blind man in a nudist colony because it wouldn't be hard.
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2.
True by definition, literally "saying the same". Pointlessly obvious. Additional words that add no meaning.
"Either we'll get in trouble, or we won't" is a logical tautology. By including all possibilities the statement must inherently be true.
In "
PIN number " the word "number" is a tautology because a PIN is always a number. (At least that's what the N originally stood for — if the term PIN evolved to include letters someday then PIN number would no longer be a tautology.)
In "morning sunrise" the tautology is "morning" because sunrises are a subset of mornings; removing the first word removes no meaning. (The addition of "morning" may be aesthetically more pleasing, in a poem for example, but it remains a logical tautology.)
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3.
The repetition of meaning in the same sentence, using different words. Usually decreases clarity of speech/writing.
Example of a sentence using Tautology:
He struggled to lift the heavy weights, he had trouble raising them.
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4.
A tautology is a reiteration of a
Examples of tautology:
It was a wet rainy day with lots of precipitation.
She is a female woman of the opposite sex, John.
We could see some dilapidated ruins.
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5.
the explanation of a word by using the word itself.
What is a tautology?
a tautology.
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6.
Unnecessary repetition of a word.
HIV virus
PIN number
7.
A tautology is a thing which is tautological.
A tautological tautology.
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