As a verb, "redundant" is not commonly used; however, the term "to redundancy" can refer to the act of making something redundant, such as in the context of employment where positions are eliminated. In this sense, it describes the process of removing unnecessary roles or functions to streamline operations. The more widely recognized usage of "redundant" is as an adjective, describing something that is superfluous or no longer needed.
It has no significance at all, it is redundant.
Yes. "Further" is almost always sufficient. "more" is superfluous, causing "furthermore" to be, in effect, redundant. Sort of like "whether or not." "Whether" already implies a choice. You needn't add the negative option.
The abbreviation is m. The word lineal or linear is redundant.
Presumably, yes! A redundant operation, but valid all the same.
Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
there is no verb (PEACE!)
Past Perfect
it is passive redundant...
A and B are redundant. There is redundancy between A and B.Both "with" and "to" are awkward, if not incorrect.
Not usually. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to yelp (make a short, sharp cry) and is normally a verb form. It could be an adjective used to describe these noises, as in "yelped cries of alarm" but this is practically redundant.
redundant.
The usual expression is simply "Opus est" (It / that is needed), as pronouns such as "id" (it) are usually omitted in Latin, because they are redundant with the tense of the verb.
Tagalog translation of REDUNDANT: paulit-ulit
Anything redundant is a back-up system.
A redundant adjective has the same meaning of another adjective.Example : She was holding a tiny little baby mouse. Tiny or little are redundant.
As far as i know there is no such thing. Servers can be redundant in many ways but never have redundant motherboards. You can have redundant power supplies , hard drives, processors, memory. However, if the motherboard dies everything goes with it.
The embassy's security system is doubly redundant.