Tautology in a sentence as a noun

> This applies to any city that seeks some form of income and social diversityThis seems like a tautology.

I don't know, that seems like a tautology - the only reason it can be weaponized against your enemies is because it's taboo.

The only quote from Orbicomm is practically a tautology.

It's a narcissistic tautology, and it's a black hole that sadly many otherwise intelligent people get sucked into.

That governments are run by the powerful is a tautology, and the iron law of oligarchy makes it clear that it isn't "the people" really running the show.

The Tenth Amendment is only now interpreted as a tautology for political convenience.

The fact that a formal engineering/MBA education isn't a prerequisite for business success is almost a tautology now, especially among software startups.

From the Haskell reddit discussion:> It's a simple truth, indeed a tautology, that if you want the compiler to check the consistency of interactions between modules, then the compiler must know the information that it is checking.

Tautology definitions

noun

(logic) a statement that is necessarily true; "the statement `he is brave or he is not brave' is a tautology"

noun

useless repetition; "to say that something is `adequate enough' is a tautology"