0 using two words or phrases that express the same meaning, in a way that is unnecessary and usually unintentional:
The phrase "water baptism" is tautological as baptism is always with water.
Do you protect workers or do you protect jobs? The question might seem tautological, but there is indeed a difference.
The axiom that “existence exists,” is intended not as the mere tautological observation that “whatever exists, exists,” but rather as a recognition that something does indeed exist.
That statement may be the mathematical equivalent of a tautological error.
It is all quite tautological, this nonsense: to change the behavior of the system, all one has to do is change the system's incentive structures.
The findings for the low group may appear tautological, but they are not.
Now what must be recognized first is that in the fine-tuning argument k is not tautological.
The often ill-informed and tautological consensus appears to be that it cannot.