Sentences with phrase «rather redundant»

Intel sent along a statement to accompany the guidance, which seems rather redundant with the above, but just in case:
This is rather important, seeing as it will render the rest of this text rather redundant if you can not!
The ONCA themselves note this paper at paras. 51 and 55, so it seems rather redundant to raise it without pointing to anything within the paper in particular.
«Naming and shaming proposals seem rather redundant when the media to do such a good job at exposing people who use avoidance schemes!
The stealth mechanics are on - the - whole well done, but after the first two segments, they become rather redundant and uninspired; it consists of hiding in tall shrubbery, taking down enemies and hiding their bodies out of sight and using vertical ledge takedowns.
However, the health indicator may seem rather redundant as fighters can transform into terminators.
Strictly speaking, the name «Gili Islands» is rather redundant, as gili simply means «small island» in Sasak, the local Lombok dialect, but the name has stuck and is universally used and understood in travel and guide books denoting a holiday destination.
I feel the Amex Platinum and Citi Prestige are rather redundant when paired with the Sapphire Reserve, but I'm sure a few cases could be made to carry both.
(Ice Cream Sandwich has a native screen - capture command that can be activated by pressing the volume - down and power buttons together, making Samsung's addition rather redundant.)
If you ask me, it's also rather redundant in the lineup given that BMW already offers the 3 Series, but hey, I'm not here to judge marketing strategies.
Sport is next up and felt like a rather redundant mode.
It is rather redundant.
Wenger going for wingbacks who can not cross a ball, Kalasinac never even tries to and Bellerin over hits them, made Walcott rather redundant and he wasn't given a cnance.
I just suggested raw, because they are even better for you — and duhh — they are never salted... so it's rather redundant.
It is perhaps impolite» and rather redundant» to ask how the «better» can be determined when it can not be determined, and how the determiner can know what is «likely» to result in a «better» life.
All these objections are mostly pointless and rather redundant.
It's rather redundant to have to educate stupid people on how to think when it is so easy to perceive the facts and how one can get the facts.

Not exact matches

Of those that then choose to go back for a graduate degree, more and more choose other disciplines rather than pursuing a largely redundant MBA.
* Because the mind does not need continually to be focussing on the past in order to preserve memory, literate cultures are freed to be forward - looking rather than backward - looking, and sequential in thought rather than redundant or back - looping.
I'd rather us get another quality CB anyways than a RB who will become redundant after Jenko comes back next summer.
Until the superlicence points system made the series kinda redundant, Red Bull usually preferred to put its junior drivers in FR3.5 rather than GP2.
Speaking at an event organised by the Left - wing Fabian think - tank yesterday, Lord Mandelson indicated ministers would put money into retraining those made redundant rather than subsidising firms to keep jobs open.
This week's polling catastrophe gives us on opportunity to once again talk about what we actually believe in, rather than what Lord Ashcroft and his hugely expensive collection of redundant charts says we should believe in.
«It's redundant... but I'd rather have it that way.»
Acknowledging that the State of the State and the annual budget message had become somewhat redundant, Mr. Cuomo lately had combined the two, holding one event at the Empire State Plaza convention center rather than the grander Assembly chamber.
-- In a blog post, Jay Bradner, the former head of Dana - Farber Cancer Institute and the current president of Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research, wrote that too many investment dollars have gone into redundant cancer programs, such as more checkpoint inhibitors, rather than going after tougher drug targets that might have a greater future impact.
«We're not saying these enhancers are perfectly redundant in that one or the other isn't important, but rather there is a mechanism of protecting against deleterious effects on the order of a given generation,» Pennacchio summarized.
I could appreciate the subtlety, the complete lack of redundant exposition and the calm approach to proceedings, but I was also rather bored.
Rather than offering different cars to purchase, GRID 2 provides a steady drip feed of new cars throughout the single - player campaign, which quickly leads to an overstuffed garage full of redundant and under - used vehicles.
Rather, the story crawls to a close, and the excitement undercut by redundant scenes and an overlong third act.
It's all rather tedious and perhaps redundant — we all should just pay attention when driving.
Rather than have redundant information on my home page and about page, i decided to have a top section with a brief introduction with more detail below.
Still, with this growing interest and Outsider Artists becoming «mainstream», this «Outsider» label becomes rather contradictive and redundant.
More broadly, artists came to believe that adding a signature was an aesthetic choice rather than a requirement for exhibition; artists assumed that viewers would know who made each piece based on the use of materials and subject matter, which rendered a signature redundant.
In acquisitions of rate - regulated utilities, companies are typically buying standalone businesses rather than trying to consolidate, meaning that management is unlikely to be making a lot of people redundant, he says.
As David Whelan pointed out in his guest column in September (thank you David), if librarians don't figure out how they can meet the actual needs of their organizations (rather than the ones we have traditionally and recently less relevantly filled), we're going to join those librarians who have been declared redundant.
When the agency agreed with Circuit Judge Kimberly A. Moore's understanding that a denial of institution on redundancy grounds was not a «substantive» determination, but rather meant that the issues not instituted were «redundant in terms of too many different grounds of rejection,» she criticized the practice as resembling «Putting a blindfold on and throwing darts at a wall and deciding which grounds to go forward with.
But it was a bit buggy, redundant with the main Facebook app's event feature, and ruled out places that were fun every night rather than just when they threw parties.
So rather than sell a redundant, inoperable charging station alongside the iPhone 8 at launch, Apple will delay the feature until it's ready.
Many job seekers often fall into the trap of using redundant phrases and words when writing their resume because they are focused on spicing up their boring jobs rather than illustrating their accomplishments.
No - one likes making staff redundant, let alone at Christmas when most of us would prefer to be sending Christmas Cheer rather than a P45.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z