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View synonyms for redundant

redundant

[ ri-duhn-duhnt ]

adjective

  1. exceeding what is needed or useful; superfluous:

    You can shorten the article by omitting these redundant paragraphs.

    I decided that a sixth pair of dress shoes was redundant.

    Synonyms: tautological, superfluous, useless, excessive

  2. characterized by unnecessary words or repetition; verbose:

    He writes in a redundant style.

    Synonyms: repetitive, verbose

  3. serving or added as a backup; extra:

    If the latch fails on this backwards-opening car hood, the wind will blow it down rather than up, so a redundant latch is not needed.

  4. having one or more extra or duplicate parts or features:

    The genetic code is redundant, meaning that more than one codon can map to the same amino acid.

  5. Chiefly British. (of a worker) laid off or unemployed:

    If the mine were to close, the result would be 183 redundant workers.

  6. Computers.
    1. (of code, or of a signal communicating a message) including or encoding more than the required information, so as to provide a fallback, a means of validating data, an accommodation for different platforms, etc.
    2. (of network or system components) providing an additional traffic path or storage place for data, so that if one fails, the other can take over or serve as backup.
  7. Engineering.
    1. (of a structural member or part) designed to withstand stresses greater than or different from those that can be calculated or predicted.
    2. (of a structure) having members or parts designed to withstand stresses that cannot be calculated or predicted.
    3. (of a complete truss) having additional members enabling it to withstand loads that are not centered. Compare complete ( def 8 ), incomplete ( def 3 ).
    4. (of a device, circuit, etc.) having extra or duplicate parts that can serve as a backup in case other parts malfunction.
  8. Linguistics. including or encoding more information than is necessary for communication: for example, in my three sons, the plural ending "-s" on sons is redundant because three already indicates plurality.
  9. extremely lush or abundant:

    The jungle, with its exuberant, redundant vegetation, hides bizarre and exotic creatures.



redundant

/ rɪˈdʌndənt /

adjective

  1. surplus to requirements; unnecessary or superfluous
  2. verbose or tautological
  3. deprived of one's job because it is no longer necessary for efficient operation

    he has been made redundant

  4. (of components, information, etc) duplicated or added as a precaution against failure, error, etc
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Derived Forms

  • reˈdundantly, adverb
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Other Words From

  • re·dun·dant·ly adverb
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Word History and Origins

Origin of redundant1

First recorded in 1595–1605; from Latin redundant-, stem of redundāns “flowing back, being excessive,” present participle of redundāre “to flow back, overflow, be excessive”; redound ( def ), -ant ( def )
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Word History and Origins

Origin of redundant1

C17: from Latin redundans overflowing, from redundāre to run back, stream over; see redound
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Synonym Study

See wordy.
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Example Sentences

The club was suspended in October 2022 before going into administration a week later and making 167 players and staff redundant.

From BBC

The question became redundant when there was a multi-car crash at the Swimming Pool and the race was red-flagged.

From BBC

While Republicans have tied her to Biden’s more unpopular policies, Harris has rendered some of their Biden-specific attack lines redundant.

From BBC

All agree that office-based careers have left them at times feeling redundant and pointless.

From BBC

Seven years later, when MacCallum was made redundant, the two women decided to set up the Rainbow Valley charity in Johanna's memory.

From BBC

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