redundancy|redundancies in English
noun
[rɪ'dʌndənsɪ]
excessive plentifulness, superfluity; wordiness; state of being unemployed; layoff; abundance; needless repetitio
Use "redundancy|redundancies" in a sentence
1. According its presenting forms, the information redundancy in language can be divided into two types: repetitive information redundancy and connotative information redundancy.
2. She took voluntary redundancy.
3. There must be redundancy.
4. He took voluntary redundancy.
5. The redundancies will be phased over two years.
6. The disappointing sales figures foreshadow more redundancies.
7. The union would like more input on redundancies.
8. Redundancy is the critical issue here.
9. They chose to take voluntary redundancy.
10. Redundancy is not a social evil.
11. I know about redundancy, Mr. Hunter.
12. All employers used to receive a rebate of 35 percent of their redundancy bill from the Redundancy Fund.
13. 10 The disappointing sales figures foreshadow more redundancies.
14. He was gobsmacked when he heard of the redundancies.
15. Three of the most popular ones are the conventional Checksum, LRC (longitudinal redundancy check), and CRC (cyclic redundancy check)
16. Calculation of redundancies and of cessation of activity
17. Workers won their fight to stop compulsory redundancies.
18. Transmission capacity probing using adaptive redundancy adjustment
19. Transmission rate adaptation with incremental redundancy
20. The FADEC system consists of hardware layer based on similarity redundancy technique and software layer based on dissimilarity redundancy technique.
21. 5 The closure of the mine led to large-scale redundancies.
22. The amendment will reduce the redundancy.
23. Two thousand workers now face redundancy.
24. Events giving rise to the redundancies and cessation of activity
25. Expensive redundancies and associated problems with information consistency are eliminated.