A Tautological Poem
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A Tautological Poem

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“The clouds floated across the sky one after the other in succession” he said tautologically. . . . . . #clouds #tautological #sky #wordoftheday #dictionary https://www.instagram.com/p/B4oHBUhlsc1/?igshid=1x6e8xsvx4v4t
tautological
adjective | tau·to·log·i·cal | \ˌtȯ-tə-ˈlä-ji-kəl \
involving or containing rhetorical tautology : redundant
true by virtue of its logical form alone
Tautology is often used to describe “circular thinking”, whereas one thing drives another to be true, which eventually reinforces the original idea. Useful to describe depression and anxiety spirals in mental illness.
Non è un rebus formulato benissimo, ma mi piace che la soluzione sia una sorta di definizione di rebus. Una specie di tautologia.
MY GUY THAT IS A TAUTOLOGICAL NECESSITY.

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It’s not “survival of the fittest”...
It’s survival of the OLDEST.
Duh 🙄
Pendle Hill, England
The word ‘pen’ means hill.
Later, the next incomers changed the hill’s name to ‘Pendle’, meaning ‘hill hill’.
And then the next incomers, not knowing the etymology (and sadly lacking an internet) called it Pendle Hill or ‘hill hill hill’.
So Pendle Hill really, really, really is a hill, because anything said three times is the truth.
"A place name is tautological if two differently sounding parts of it are synonymous. This often occurs when a name from one language is imported into another and a standard descriptor is added on from the second language."
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