pleonastic
11pleonastic — ple·o·nas·tic || ‚plɪəʊ næstɪk adj. verbose, redundant, using too many words to express an idea …
12pleonastic — a. Redundant, tautological, diffuse, superfluous …
13pleonastic — adj redundant, tautological, periphrastic, circumlocutory; verbose, wordy, prolix, profuse, diffuse, long winded, longiloquent; repetitive, tedious, battological; digressive, discursive, circuitous, ambagious, roundabout, indirect, maundering,… …
14pleonastic — ple·o·nas·tic …
15pleonastic — See: pleonasm …
16pleonastic genitive — noun : double possessive …
17Pleonastical — Pleonastic Ple o*nas tic, Pleonastical Ple o*nas tic*al, a. [Cf. F. pl[ e]onastique.] Of or pertaining to pleonasm; of the nature of pleonasm; redundant. [1913 Webster] …
18pleonasm — pleonastic, adj. pleonastically, adv. /plee euh naz euhm/, n. 1. the use of more words than are necessary to express an idea; redundancy. 2. an instance of this, as free gift or true fact. 3. a redundant word or expression. [1580 90; < LL… …
19Pleonasm — is the use of more words (or even word parts) than necessary to express an idea clearly. A closely related concept is rhetorical tautology, in which essentially the same thing is said more than once in different words (e.g black darkness , cold… …
20Coreference — In linguistics, co reference occurs when multiple expressions in a sentence or document refer to the same thing; or in linguistic jargon, they have the same referent. For example, in the sentence Mary said she would help me , she and Mary are… …