A tautophrase is a phrase or sentence that repeats an idea in the same words. The name was coined in 2006 by William Safire in The New York Times.
Examples include:
- "Brexit means Brexit" (Theresa May)
- "A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do." (John Wayne)
- "It ain't over 'till it's over" (Yogi Berra)
- "What's done is done." (Shakespeare's Macbeth)
- "Tomorrow is tomorrow" (Antigone (Sophocles))
- "A rose is a rose is a rose." (Gertrude Stein)
- "A man's a man for a' that." (Robert Burns)
- "Facts are facts."
- "Enough is enough."
- "A deal is a deal is a deal."
- "Once it's gone it's gone."
- "It is what it is."
- "Boys will be boys."
- "A win is a win."
- "You do you."
- "A la guerre comme à la guerre" — A French phrase literally meaning "at war as at war", and figuratively roughly equivalent to the English phrase "All's fair in love and war"
- Qué será, será or che será, será — English loan from Spanish and Italian respectively, meaning "Whatever will be, will be."
- "Call a spade a spade."
- "Once you’re committed, you’re committed."
- "What wins out wins out."
- "I don’t care how much you know, if you get caught in a fire, you’re caught in a fire."
- "Game is game."
See also
- Ploce (figure of speech) – Rhetorical device
- Repetition (rhetorical device) – Poetic device
- Tautology (language) – In literary criticism, repeating an idea
- Platitude – Trite, prosaic, or cliché truism
References
- Safire, William (2006). "On language: Tautophrases" The New York Times, May 7, 2006.
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