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Book mango 418 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Redundancy into

Hello:

If there is something redundant about a sentence, could I say

“there is slight redundancy into your sentence? ”

  

Top answer

It should be " in your sentence", not "into". "There is a slight redundancy" would be more usual, but it is not impossible to omit the article (use "redundancy" uncountably). If it is a sentence then it must begin with a capital letter.

  • It should be " in your sentence", not "into".
  • "There is a slight redundancy" would be more usual, but it is not impossible to omit the article (use "redundancy" uncountably).
  • If it is a sentence then it must begin with a capital letter.
  • Also, as you have written your question, the question mark is a part of the sentence.
  • I think you don't intend this.
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1 Answers
0

It should be "in your sentence", not "into".

"There is a slight redundancy" would be more usual, but it is not impossible to omit the article (use "redundancy" uncountably).

If it is a sentence then it must begin with a capital letter. Also, as you have written your question, the question mark is a part of the sentence. I think you don't intend this.

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