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Generator für Tautologie-Beispiele

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A tautology example generator lists statements that say the same thing twice, either by restating an idea in different words or by being true under every possible circumstance. Choose how many you want and it returns clear examples like "it is what it is" and "either it will rain or it will not", each with a short note explaining why it is tautological. Writing teachers use these to show students how to spot and cut circular or empty phrasing, editors to sharpen wordy prose, and logic students to see the everyday version of a statement that is always true. Because a tautology adds emphasis or filler rather than information, recognising it helps you write with more substance. Read each example and its explanation, learn the patterns that signal a tautology, and use that awareness to trim redundant phrasing from your own writing.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many examples you want.
  2. Generate to see each tautology with a note.
  3. Read the explanation of why it repeats itself.
  4. Watch for the same patterns in your own writing.

Use Cases

  • Teaching students to spot circular phrasing
  • Editing wordy prose toward real substance
  • Illustrating logical truisms with everyday examples
  • Building a self-editing checklist against filler
  • Sparking a discussion on rhetoric and logic

Tips

  • Learn the patterns that signal a tautology.
  • Trim redundant phrases that add no information.
  • Keep a tautology only for deliberate emphasis.
  • Distinguish logical truisms from simple redundancy.

FAQ

what is a tautology

A tautology says the same thing twice or is true by its very structure. "It is what it is" restates itself, while "either it rains or it does not" is always true. Both add no new information.

is a tautology a grammar mistake

Not exactly — it is a redundancy or logical truism rather than a grammar error. Some are used for emphasis in speech, but in concise writing recognising and trimming them makes prose carry more meaning.

is anything stored

No. The examples are drawn entirely in your browser from a built-in list, so nothing leaves your device. Generate as often as you like to study different tautology patterns.

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