A Free Gift

Did you ever ask yourself about “free gift” offers? Like, what other kinds of gifts are there? “I’ll give you this present, but you have to pay for it!” Seriously?

Let’s poke some fun at tautologies. What are tautologies? Very simply, a grammatical construction which unnecessarily duplicates a meaning. You’re saying something twice when you don’t need to do so. It’s something we all do, all the time. It’s saying the same thing twice, two times. Double. Redundantly. Oh, you get the point!

What marriage ceremony is complete without the officiant “joining together” the lovely couple? How else would one join them, other than together? Even in today’s permissive world.

“Repeat that again” you might say. Do you really mean, “Please say that again”, or “Please repeat that”, or are you actually asking me to repeat it twice over?

Journalists love to talk about “close proximity” and “final outcome”, as if there such a thing as a distant proximity, or perhaps a beginning outcome.

“Advance planning” is another fun tautology. Notwithstanding that we all try to do it, you can’t actually plan after the fact. “Brief summaries”, “true facts”, and “final conclusions” are all tautologies, although these all rattle off our tongues “each and every” day, if “past experience” is any guide.

The “general consensus” is that there is no “safe haven” for tautologies. And as an “added bonus”, that’s my “final conclusion”.

Wow! Now that’s going to mess with your day, isn’t it? But what fun you’re going to have with colleagues. Just tell them it’s a “new innovation”.

Similar Posts

  • No Loose Ends

    Like all self-respecting couples in their seventies, Karen and I have had “the discussion”. In fact, we’ve even “made plans”. And while you may not be anywhere near us in age, you too should have plans. About “you know what”. While I may not be as nuts-and-bolts about death as a funeral director, my history…

  • Expense? Or Investment?

    My friend and speaking colleague Mark Gasparotto, former Canadian army colonel, puts it bluntly: “Leadership training is an investment, not an expense.” Having led troops “outside the wire” in Afghanistan, he knows whereof he speaks. He could not be more correct about leadership training, in fact about any developmental exercise which enhances the value and…

  • Reigned In

    If I read one more pontification about the need to “reign in” the US Supreme Court or some other out of line demagogues, I’m going to jump off a cliff. No parachute. Not that I disagree with what they’re trying to say, but because they’re relying on spellcheck instead of proofreading. Kings and queens reign,…

  • Majesty

    We’ll miss her, won’t we? For nearly all of us, Queen Elizabeth II has always been there, just like the sun and the moon and the morning mist. Elizabeth became Queen in difficult circumstances. Her father, George VI, died far too young. Lung cancer. He had been a good king, decent, inspiring, courageous, but even…