Tedium vs Tautology - What's the difference?
tedium | tautology |
Boredom or tediousness; ennui.
(uncountable) redundant use of words
(countable) An expression that features tautology.
* 1946 , Bertrand Russell, History of Western Philosophy :
(countable, logic) A statement that is true for all values of its variables
As nouns the difference between tedium and tautology
is that tedium is boredom or tediousness; ennui while tautology is redundant use of words.tedium
English
Alternative forms
* (dated)Noun
(en-noun)Synonyms
* boredom, drudgery, ennui, tediousnesstautology
English
Noun
- It is tautology to say, "Forward Planning".
- ''The expression "raze to the ground" is a tautology, since the word "raze" includes the notion "to the ground".
- Pure mathematics consists of tautologies , analogous to ‘men are men’, but usually more complicated.
- Given a Boolean A, "A OR (NOT A)" is a tautology .
- A logical statement which is neither a tautology nor a contradiction is a contingency.
- A tautology''' can be verified by constructing a truth tree for its negation: if all of the leaf nodes of such truth tree end in X's, then the original (pre-negated) formula is a '''tautology .