What is the difference between pleonasm and tautology?
Pleonasm and tautology are often used interchangeably, but some sources draw a distinction between the two:
- Pleonasm involves using unnecessary words to describe something that is already implied instead of using a single word that would have been enough. For example, “frozen ice” is a pleonasm because ice is always frozen.
- Tautology is the repetition of the same idea or meaning using synonyms. For instance, “In my opinion, I think this was a bad idea.”
In short, both pleonasm and tautology involve redundancy, and the terms are often used as synonyms. However, some sources define tautology as explicitly repeating the same meaning, while pleonasm is the broader concept of using more words than needed to convey an idea.