Yes it is. Colleague means: A fellow member of a profession, staff, academic faculty or other organization; an associate.
So substituting the definition for the work colleague in "fellow colleague" gives you: "fellow fellow member of a profession, staff, academic faculty or other organization; an associate".
That is the correct spelling of the word "commemorate".
The phrase is correctly spelled "Whom are you with?"But the words for someone you are with can include:boyfriend or girlfriend (girl friend)companionescort (to an event)colleague (fellow worker)consort (spouse or significant other)
Colleague. colleague, co-worker, collaborator
The expression is used in British English. Employees who are let go from a business when times are bad are either "laid off" or - if they have sufficient time completed - "made redundant".
In the word colleague the first syllable receives the stress.
The phrase "fellow colleague" is redundant, as both "fellow" and "colleague" convey a similar meaning of someone who works with you in the same profession or organization. You can simply use "colleague" to refer to someone you work with.
A colleague is someone you work with in a professional setting, while a coworker is someone you work alongside. In general, colleagues are seen as having a more professional or formal relationship, while coworkers can refer to anyone you work with in the same workplace.
Because they make you sound moronic...
fellow worker, partner, ally, associate, assistant, team-mate, comrade, helper
Speakers and writers use redundant expressions because they fear the audience didn't hear or understand them the first time. When speaking, redundant expression may be appropriate. In writing, redundancy is almost never appropriate.
timid,coward
That is the correct spelling of the word "commemorate".
Although he was an enemy soldier and had shot my best friend, I could not stand by and watch a fellow soul suffer.
The term "fellow" typically has a gender-neutral form and can be used to describe both males and females. If you specifically wanted to address a female, you could use "fellow" as a gender-neutral term or consider using alternatives like "colleague," "associate," or "companion" for female-specific references.
A fellow is a person who is a member of the same group or category as another person, often used to refer to someone who shares a specific characteristic or affiliation with others. It can also refer to a companion or colleague, particularly in an academic or professional setting.
Is your ex-colleague.
The phrase is correctly spelled "Whom are you with?"But the words for someone you are with can include:boyfriend or girlfriend (girl friend)companionescort (to an event)colleague (fellow worker)consort (spouse or significant other)