The embassy's security system is doubly redundant.
I would consider it redundant if you locked your car doors after locking the car in the garage.
Her father had been made redundant due to company cutbacks.
The definition of cliché is a word or phrase that have been used so much that they are not effective or interesting any longer. Your arguments are redundant, weak, and cliché.
The sentence may or may not be redundant depending on context, but the use of both "just" and "only" is redundant. (You could say that the sentence contains a redundancy.) Both words mean the same thing in this context and just one of them would suffice.
yes
The use of multiple adjectives that mean the same thing is redundant, repetitive, superfluous, and unnecessary.When the brewery company sold its last carthorse, its blacksmith became redundant, so he retired to greener pastures.All systems in an airliner are designed with redundantbackup systems in case of failure during a flight.
Redundancy is the use of repetitive words or meanings.I went to the ATM machine. - Since ATM stands for Automated Teller Machine, using the word machine becomes redundant. Instead, just write: I went to the ATM.
No. The correct wording for that sentence would be: "Where is David?"
no. not at all really. I am longing for you, implies the waiting. you don't need the redundant word waiting..
"Can you please be more specific?" There's an example. In fact, you could've used the word 'please' in your question and made the whole process redundant.
When I reminded him to clean the shelves and dust them, he said I was being redundant since we've never cleaned the shelves by any other method.