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1 redundant
((of workers) no longer employed because there is no longer any job for them where they used to work: Fifty men have just been made redundant at the local factory.) přebytečný* * *• zbytečný• nadbytečný
См. также в других словарях:
redundancy rebate — /rɪ dʌndənsi ˌri:beɪt/ noun a payment made to a company to compensate for redundancy payments made … Dictionary of banking and finance
redundancy — re‧dun‧dan‧cy [rɪˈdʌndənsi] noun redundancies PLURALFORM [countable, uncountable] especially BrE HUMAN RESOURCES when someone loses their job in a company because the job is no longer needed: • Over 2000 car workers now face redundancy. • Sev … Financial and business terms
redundancy — I noun duplication, excess, excessiveness, immoderation, inordinacy, inordinate amount, needlessness, nimiety, overplus, oversupply, pleonasm, recurrence, redundance, redundantia, reiteration, repetition, restatement, retelling, superabundance,… … Law dictionary
Redundancy (information theory) — Redundancy in information theory is the number of bits used to transmit a message minus the number of bits of actual information in the message. Informally, it is the amount of wasted space used to transmit certain data. Data compression is a way … Wikipedia
redundancy payment — UK US noun [C] (also redundancy pay [U]) ► HR money that a company pays to workers who have lost their jobs because they are no longer needed: eligible for/entitled to a redundancy payment »An employee becomes eligible for a redundancy payment… … Financial and business terms
Redundancy — may refer to: Redundancy (engineering) Redundancy (information theory) Redundancy (language) Redundancy (total quality management) Redundancy (user interfaces) Data redundancy Gene redundancy Logic redundancy Redundant acronym syndrome syndrome… … Wikipedia
redundancy package — UK US noun [C] ► HR all the payments and advantages that a company gives to workers who have lost their jobs because they are no longer needed: »If the redundancy package is very generous many staff will opt for that and not even consider… … Financial and business terms
Redundancy (language) — In the study of language, redundancy is considered a vital feature of language. It shields a message from possible flaws in transmission (unclarity, ambiguity, noise). In this way, it increases the odds of predictability of a message s meaning.… … Wikipedia
Redundancy theory of truth — According to the redundancy theory of truth, or the disquotational theory of truth, asserting that a statement is true is completely equivalent to asserting the statement itself. For example, asserting the sentence Snow is white is true is … Wikipedia
Redundancy (engineering) — In engineering, redundancy is the duplication of critical s of a system with the intention of increasing reliability of the system, usually in the case of a backup or fail safe. In many safety critical systems, such as fly by wire aircraft, some… … Wikipedia
redundancy — noun (BrE) ADJECTIVE ▪ large scale, major, mass, massive ▪ The closure of the mine led to large scale redundancies. ▪ possible, threatened ▪ … Collocations dictionary