noun
needless repetition of an idea, especially in words other than those of the immediate context, without imparting additional force or clearness, as in widow woman.
Tautology comes from Late Latin tautologia, a borrowing of a Hellenistic Greek rhetorical term 喧硃喝喧棗梭棗眶穩硃 repetition of something already said. The second half of tautology is clear enough, being the same suffix as in theology or philology. The first element tauto- needs some clarification: it comes from t簷 aut籀 the same, formed from the neuter singular of the definite article and the third person pronoun (the combination of t簷 aut籀 to 喧硃喝喧籀 is called 域娶璽莽勳莽 mixture, which appears in idiosyncrasy personal temperamenta personal blend as it were. Tautology entered English in the 16th century.
Take away perspective and you are stranded in a universal present, something akin, weirdly, to the unhistoried and, at the risk of tautology, perspective-less art of the Middle Ages.
… the central moral question is whether we are going to use the language of tautology and self-justification one that gives us alone the right to be called reasonable and human or whether we labour to discover other ways of speaking and imagining.
Sweeting is an obvious noun formed from the adjective sweet and the noun suffix -ing one belonging to, descended from. The sense sweetheart, not used nowadays, dates from about 1300; the sense a variety of sweet apple dates from the 16th century.
… I do give her the frut of two appel trees one a sweeting ye nothermost of ye sweetings in ye Lower yard and ye westermost tree by ye highway.
They be not righteous actions that make a righteous man; nor be they evil actions that make a wicked man: for a tree must be a sweeting tree before it yield sweetings; and a crab tree before it bring forth crabs.
adjective
Heraldry. (of an animal, as a deer) shown facing forward without a neck: a stag's head caboshed.
Caboshed, also spelled caboched and cabossed is a technical term in heraldry referring to a beast decapitated behind its horns. The -ed shows that the variant spellings are all past participles of the very rare and obsolete verb cabochen, cabachen to behead (a deer or other beast) right behind its horns. The English verb comes from the French verb cabocher (past participle 釵硃莉棗釵堯矇), a derivative of caboche (Old French caboce), a pejorative northern French dialect (Norman, Picard) word meaning head (literally cabbage). Caboche may be a development of Latin caput h梗硃餃. Caboshed entered English in the 16th century.
… an heraldic shield featuring a lion’s head caboshed, with medusa hair, a single bulging eye, a beard, and tusks …
A fanciful menagerie flourished on the banners: the caboshed boar of Janos of Hungary, the naiant dolphin of a Sicilian Norman, the salient-countersalient white stags of Conrad’s men, and everywhere the Templars’ Pegasus.