Well, it's called "tautology" and it's a perfectly valid rhetorical device.
A tautology is a sentence vacuously true. This is called a pleonasm.
Was about to post the same thing. It is indeed the under-appreciated pleonasm rather than a tautology.
Yes, mixed the two. Point stands though.
A tautology is a sentence vacuously true. This is called a pleonasm.
Was about to post the same thing. It is indeed the under-appreciated pleonasm rather than a tautology.
Yes, mixed the two. Point stands though.