Associations to the word «Redundant»
Noun
- Redundancy
- Reliability
- Chichester
- Array
- Electrification
- Dual
- Disk
- Conservation
- Axiom
- Topology
- Parity
- Computation
- Constraint
- Lincolnshire
- Server
- Hardware
- Workforce
- Availability
- Colliery
- Trust
- Phoneme
- Acronym
- Routing
- Functionality
- Storage
- Raid
- Automation
- Datum
- Locomotive
- Compression
- Switch
- Closure
- Genome
- Replication
- Bandwidth
- Connectivity
- Duplication
- Synapse
- Cambridgeshire
- Malfunction
- Forerunner
- Pronoun
- Ethernet
- Node
- Modality
- Elimination
- Rendering
- Backbone
- Spacecraft
- Correction
- Evangelist
- Congestion
- Render
- Modulation
- Mesh
- Excise
- Genes
- Verb
- Advent
- Error
- Data
- Failure
- Processor
- Sensor
- Employee
- Fault
- Magdalene
- Northamptonshire
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
REDUNDANT, adjective. Superfluous; exceeding what is necessary.
REDUNDANT, adjective. (of words, writing, etc) Repetitive or needlessly wordy.
REDUNDANT, adjective. (chiefly British) (NZ) (AU) Dismissed from employment because no longer needed; as in "rendered redundant".
REDUNDANT, adjective. Duplicating or able to duplicate the function of another component of a system, providing back-up in the event the other component fails.
REDUNDANT ARRAY OF INDEPENDENT DISKS, noun. (computing) A system using multiple hard drives for the sharing or replication of data in order to increase data integrity, fault-tolerance or throughput.
REDUNDANT COLON, noun. (pathology) A large intestine (colon) that is longer than normal and as a result has repetitive, overlapping loops
Dictionary definition
REDUNDANT, adjective. More than is needed, desired, or required; "trying to lose excess weight"; "found some extra change lying on the dresser"; "yet another book on heraldry might be thought redundant"; "skills made redundant by technological advance"; "sleeping in the spare room"; "supernumerary ornamentation"; "it was supererogatory of her to gloat"; "delete superfluous (or unnecessary) words"; "extra ribs as well as other supernumerary internal parts"; "surplus cheese distributed to the needy".
REDUNDANT, adjective. Repetition of same sense in different words; "`a true fact' and `a free gift' are pleonastic expressions"; "the phrase `a beginner who has just started' is tautological"; "at the risk of being redundant I return to my original proposition"- J.B.Conant.
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.