Quote:
Originally posted by Graal518
Word for the day: Redundant
Definition for redundant provided by The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Other important copyright information
ADJECTIVE
1. Exceeding what is necessary or natural; superfluous. 2. Needlessly wordy or repetitive in expression: "a student paper filled with redundant phrases." 3. Of or relating to linguistic redundancy. 4. Chiefly British Dismissed or laid off from work, as for being no longer needed. 5. Electronics Of or involving redundancy in electronic equipment. 6. Of or involving redundancy in the transmission of messages.
ETYMOLOGY
Latin redundansredundant- present participle of redundare, to overflow, re-, red-, re-, + undare, to surge, from unda, wave. wed-
OTHER FORMS
re·dun'dant·ly - ADVERB
Example: These complaint threads about UN are redundant.
For crying out loud, take this crap to the PM's.
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I didn't make this thread but oh well. Go on to UN, and PM Yakuna, saying that he has illegal lamps on his server, and that you will show him where they are exactly. You will get no response. I know because that's what I did, and nothing happened.
--The Wizard