Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
"But what has redundance got to do with this?"
If the whole workforce was forced to disband, the council would face a redundance bill of around £2.5m.
Nothing strange, to be sure, beyond the venial sin of redundance, since Roberto was an only child.
I felt a bit cross at what I thought to be redundance on don Juan's part.
Affirst there were only afew errors, none that would have mattered in the long run given the redundance of genes.
The second argument concerns surveillance redundance, and it is increasingly relevant in the age of Facebook and online self-disclosure.
She had Grauel and Barlog commit it to memory too, protecting it through redundance.
The oaths themselves were necessarily spare, given the constraints of time and the redundance of most of the conventional vocabulary.
Granted, the script is sometimes given over to redundance and overstatements, such as, "no people or objects were too big or inconspicuous for Sandburg's notice."
To divert one from all that running redundance, seamless staging and comic turns of virtuosity, distinctiveness and variety are essential.
Here, Mr. Gurney dilutes satire by redundance and tempers it with affection to the point of ambivalence.
What defines such goings on, besides obvious redundance, is sheer simple-mindedness, with an overlay of silliness and an aura of good cheer.
Opting for redundance by giving us an even harder and meaner Dorothy than we can bear, Miss Franz fails to compensate with singing or presence.
I would give all for the luxurious redundance of one Hilo gulch, or for one day of those soft dreamy "skies whose very tears are balm."
Mr. Utley's genuine release of martyrdom produces the haunting effect of lingering drama, finally upstaging the showy redundance of not-so-special effects.
In his perfunctory commentary and continuity, Mr. Connors appears to have opted for redundance rather than research, and he makes sweeping overstatements and practices careless writing.
His French style, based partly on his Latin reading, has, together with its undeniable vigour and picturesqueness, the characteristic redundance and rhetorical quality of the Burgundian school.
The fact that NBC's coverage by three lower-paid correspondents did not suffer by comparison is a comment on the redundance of even a network anchor when seasoned reporters are already on the job.
It is in that second act, after the moment of redemption according to Porter and Clooney, that Mr. Vetere, with redundance rather than facility, makes it obvious the torturous first act was indeed leading up to something.
The stories become more orotund as we move "from the allusive cipher of the Rig-Veda and the abrupt, broken narratives of the Brahmanas . . . to the ruthless redundance of the Puranas."
It actually means "Corporation", but Duchamp thought it a fine name and later while the legal paper work was being written up the "Inc." was added, making its English translation, with its delightful dadaistic redundance, "Corporation, Inc.".
"But ultimately all of us must acknowledge that we did not have the data, the span of control, the redundance, the fusion or the laws in place to give us the chance to compensate for the mistakes that will be made in any human endeavor."
Still, with nonliteral communication doing most of the work, it's a difficult balance to strike between keeping an audience on narrative track and burdening it with redundance, which is to say that the element of the show that doesn't work is the script.
I cannot attempt to transcribe it verbatim in all its cloudiness and redundance, but I will tell its gist enough to show why the sound of the water against the vessel's sides became so unendurable to me that I stopped my ears with cotton.