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Superfluous, and under changes with time
Answer for the clue "Superfluous, and under changes with time ", 9 letters:
redundant
Alternative clues for the word redundant
Word definitions for redundant in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 superfluous; exceeding what is necessary. 2 (lb en of words, writing, etc) repetitive or needlessly wordy. 3 (context chiefly British NZ AU English) dismiss from employment because no longer needed; as in "rendered redundant". 4 duplicate or able to ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. more than is needed, desired, or required; "trying to lose excess weight"; "found some extra change lying on the dresser"; "yet another book on heraldry might be thought redundant"; "skills made redundant by technological advance"; "sleeping in the ...
Usage examples of redundant.
CBA television and radio network and affiliated stations, strict financial controls had been introduced, budgets pared and redundant personnel dismissed.
They are not only secretive, appropriative, selfish, and self-defensive, but when redundant are aggressive and tend to destructiveness, the gratification of animal indulgence, intemperance, and debauchery.
The timer had three redundant firing circuits, and all went off within a millisecond of one another, sending a signal down the detonator wires.
He intended to check the quintuply redundant isolation and feed systems on each of them.
Clinton described resorption during development: redundant neurons disappear, resorbed by the body, a process controlled by feedback control mechanisms using sensory data in part.
Without the internal armored bulkheads and cofferdams, the separate, parallel control runs, and redundant circuit breakers of military design, there was little to stop the train wreck of induced component failures, and a chain reaction of shorting, arcing superconductor rings raced through the compartment.
Cyfer will appreciate the implications: a colinear, unidirectional, non-overlapping, redundant triplet code.
The Kaliningrad had too many back-up systems and redundant circuits, and in the computer cabinets functions were in some cases combined.
They stood around the redundant sweatbox blinking at each other, naked, reaching for sheets, blankets, towels, anything to cover their red-skinned, sweaty embarrassment, memories of the previous two wild hours turning their hot red faces still redder.
Although all of the security services have slightly different formal missions, they also have overlapping and redundant responsibilities, and all of them have at least some internal security functions.
By the time of the Gulf War, Iraq had numerous redundant facilities, all heavily guarded and bermed, some of them so secret that Western intelligence did not know of their existence.
It shuts down redundant interfaces and nodes exchange data with each other to inform the STP of loops or topology changes.
Memory seems to be localized in specific sites in the brain, and the survival of memories after massive brain lesions must be the result of redundant storage of static memory traces in various locales.
Clinton described resorption during development: redundant neurons disappear, resorbed by the body, a process controlled by feedback control mechanisms using sensory data in part.
He built multiple agencies with redundant missions and responsibilities to ensure that nothing would be missed, and to create rivalries that would allow him to play one group off against another.