You searched for: “some pleonasms listed
Some Pleonasms Listed
  • It's deja vu all over again. -Attributed to Yogi Berra

    The term, deja vu, means "a feeling of having experienced something before although in fact it is the first time that it has been experienced".

  • "Smoking can kill you, and if you've been killed, you've lost a very important part of your life." -Attributed to actress, Brooke Shields
  • Lead-lined coffins called a health risk.
  • Census says rich have most of the money. (news item)
  • Cliches are a dime a dozen. . . avoid them like the plague.
  • Cure suggestibility with hypnosis.
  • I've told you a million times, "Don't exaggerate!"
  • Is that a mirage or am I seeing things?
  • It's bad luck to be superstitious.
  • I used to be an agnostic, but now I'm not so sure.
  • Sometimes you can observe a lot just by watching. -Attributed to Yogi Berra
  • Half the lies our opponents tell about us are not true.
  • Football is an incredible game. Sometimes it's so incredible, it's unbelievable. -Tom Landry
  • When large numbers of men are unable to find work, unemployment results. -Calvin Coolidge
  • Anyone who goes to a psychiatrist ought to have his head examined. -Samuel Goldwyn
  • I never make predictions, especially about the future. -Attributed to Samuel Goldwyn
  • "In the city today, the temperature rose to 105 degrees. This sudden rise of temperature was responsible for the intolerable heat."
  • "Trapped, like a trap in a trap." -Dorothy Parker
  • I used to be indecisive, now I'm not sure.
  • He lived his life to the end.
  • Some people are superficial but that's just on the surface.
  • The world is apathetic but I don't care.
  • Always avoid alliteration.
  • Treachery will often bring loyalty into question.
  • Perspective is in the eye of the beholder.
  • "If we do not succeed, we run the risk of failure." -Attributed to former Vice-President Dan Quayle
  • Seen somewhere in the U.S.: "Fish and chips with French fries."

This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 21)