Synonym: excess, extra, pleonastic, spare, supererogatory, superfluous, supernumerary, surplus, tautologic, tautological. Similar words: mundane, abundance, endangered, attendant, defendant, descendant, round and round, in danger. Meaning: [rɪ'dʌndənt] adj. 1. more than is needed, desired, or required 2. repetition of same sense in different words.
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91 Hence it is unlikely that one or the other constraint is truly redundant.
92 The telcos' competitive or redundant activities will be a major factor in the shaping of the I-way.
93 In Arbroath the oil-related firm Halliburton Manufacturing is to make 64 workers redundant.
94 Two years later he was made redundant again, but gained another job in much the same way.
95 Facilities like the screen saver that's built in are redundant with Windows 3.1, but with version 3.0, are useful.
95 Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
96 How can we justify rich landowners taking public handouts while making their farmworkers redundant?
97 A warrant was issued for his arrest. 90 jobs lost A children's clothes factory is to make 90 workers redundant.
98 Given that redundancy is a fair reason for dismissing an employee, a redundant employee can not usually claim unfair dismissal.
99 But now modern information technology is making many of the former tasks of middle managers redundant.
100 Includes comment on occupancy conditions which is relevant to the re-use of redundant agricultural and other buildings in the countryside.
101 Employees of the Strathtay bus company, which has been privatized, are concerned that drivers are about to be made redundant.
102 Committee members who were responsible for setting Glenand up to promote jobs were extremely reluctant to make people redundant.
103 Some, made redundant by the Board, still haven't been paid wages.
104 Many documents, especially from the nineteenth century, contain redundant words which only serve to confuse.
105 Moving an otherwise redundant conveyancing secretary is not the answer, at least, not without paying proper attention to their training needs.
106 It is typical of the farmland which will increasingly become redundant.
107 As far as I am concerned novelists are almost as redundant as psychiatrists because both species have the same irredeemable impertinence.
108 I believe I can read the names of a few redundant colonial administrators.
109 Those made redundant were to wait for 26 weeks before being entitled to unemployment benefit.
110 When a new junior school was built in a nearby village in the late 1970s, the building became redundant.
111 But the crayfish tail circuit, more redundant than it perhaps needed to be, was error free.
112 Why such a church should become redundant is easily understood.
113 Have new television channels, satellite cable etc. made the film critic redundant and fit for an academic existence only?
114 It is nearing bankruptcy and has had to make 720 employees redundant, which is a sorry state of affairs.
115 All the modules are linked using a redundant fibre optic cable.
116 Among the most obvious categories here are the unskilled, the young, black people and those made redundant from manufacturing.
117 He was made redundant from a nearby farm in 1994, after working there for 10 years.
118 Mr Stacey was notified in February 1984 that he would be made redundant the following May.
119 There are various calculations about how much land is potentially redundant: it could be as many as three million acres.
120 Analytically this substantive meaning is redundant, a fifth wheel on the coach.
More similar words: mundane, abundance, endangered, attendant, defendant, descendant, round and round, in danger, endanger, dependance, attendance, pedant, boundary, inundate, undaunted, pedantic, foundation, fundamental, discordant, hundred, undulant, predominant, sand dune, cruel and unusual punishment, dan, dance, dancer, danger, dangle, panda.