How To Use Anachronism In A Sentence

  • The principal themes of Holland's fiction writing have been vampires, revenants, and creative anachronism.
  • To feel that way towards toffs today makes you at best an anachronism, at worst a freak, as I was reminded recently when I appeared at a literary festival.
  • Does the rule that a legislator be present to vote make sense, or is it merely an anachronism?
  • ‘It's an 18 th-century anachronism invented by guys who didn't believe the unwashed rabble were smart enough to elect a leader,’ he says.
  • Decades ago, lighthouses evolved into scenic anachronisms as the U.S. Coast Guard converted the sites still in use into fully automated navaids.
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  • I often feel I am an anachronism, that I would be more at home at the turn of the century than today.
  • It would be an anachronism to talk of Queen Victoria watching television.
  • It's difficult to tell when this anachronism is deliberate, and when it is merely a lack of writerly control.
  • But even then - I don't think many Barbeloids would disagree that fox hunting is a cruel, barbarous anachronism.
  • But if these historic anachronisms are to survive beyond the very short term they must quickly find a social role and shed the haughty isolationism which has shielded them from commercial realities.
  • The Electoral College would never have survived as a quaint anachronism of the American political system if its actions overturned the will of the people.
  • But with agricultural advances, shepherds are becoming an anachronism - a throwback to a time long before the advent of the Honda quad bike.
  • I have long held the view that A-Levels are an embarrassing anachronism, just another mechanism for separating the privileged from the unprivileged.
  • It would be an anachronism to talk of Queen Victoria watching television.
  • He is interested in the spirit of the play, and he is not averse to throwing in an anachronism or two if he thinks it will help underscore a point.
  • I delivered a paper on anachronism and identification in Aristotle and Freud a million years ago at a conference in New York.
  • As for the anachronism known as offside, experts in physiology say the human eye frequently cannot call offside accurately (try simultaneously tracking the ball and two or more sprinting players separated by 20 to 30 meters). Jonathan Littman: Innovation World Cup Style
  • For many, religion per se has become a curious historical anachronism, a dated relic of the old days.
  • The filmmaker has to create a period ambience and avoid anachronisms.
  • The last paragraph contains an anachronism. The Holy Office no longer existed at that time.
  • The President tended to regard the Church as an anachronism.
  • The politicians as we know them are already anachronisms.
  • Splash out on either and your gadget machine could end up an obsolete anachronism. Times, Sunday Times
  • It can be argued that they are an anachronism in a world where both partners work. Times, Sunday Times
  • In an age that favours froth over substance, and in a tough political world where simple ideas have to be hammered home, the presence of this high-principled intellectual is an anachronism.
  • It's the knee-jerk caricature of American generals as intolerant anachronisms.
  • Civil rights groups say the death penalty is an anachronism for a modern nation, but Singapore officials have been unswayed by appeals to stop the execution.
  • Some may think that Jesus' allusion to picking up our cross daily is an anachronism since he had not yet been crucified, but the cross was already well-known to the Jews as a hated Roman instrument of execution.
  • They wear a literal fancy dress that is a historical anachronism, and have not a single clue why they are doing it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her description of the film actually comes out of Weinberg, complete with the mistake of identifying the lead as an "eighteenth-century czarina" and the same false claims for the anachronisms of bobbed hair and a "motorcar" (Weinberg's word as well as Koenig's, p. 76 in Weinberg). That Uncertain Feeling
  • Instead, he decided that anachronism would be a major theme and encouraged the actors to avoid affecting British accents.
  • Gerard Ithier, seventh prior, and his abridger, fell into several anachronisms and mistakes, which are to be corrected by the remarks of Dom Martenne, who has given us a new and accurate edition of this life, and other pieces relating to it, Ver. The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Principal Saints January, February, March
  • It would be an anachronism to talk of Queen Victoria watching television.
  • It could help to deflect the usual charges of anachronism and unfamiliarity with the period.
  • In the smaller courts in particular, where the painter was free to indulge his fights of fancy, anachronisms and incongruities abound.
  • The next day, that goal had become passé - an amusing anachronism.
  • Anachronisms and nautical howlers bombard the reader like spindrift in a Force 10 gale.
  • Shinn was something of an anachronism even in his own time — Universalist leaders were increasingly urban and modernist, while Shinn was dedicated to rural people and biblicism — and it may not be easy for many UUs to recognize their relationship to him. Philocrites: October 2007 Archives
  • Officially, Russia seeks to lure tourists to its charms, which range from its rich cultural history to the anachronisms which are peculiarly its own, like Lenin's mausoleum, still faithfully guarded on Red Square.
  • In the course of discussing this last category, he directly engaged the topic of anachronism.
  • Some might object that to push a modern idea such as ‘international system’ back into the past is to commit anachronism.
  • A filmed version of the Pirates of Penzance, it is rich in anachronism and movie jokes, camp and buffoonery
  • After a day spent in dress rehearsal for a war that doesn't seem to be happening, the boys head to the local dance club looking like ludicrous anachronisms in their white Foreign Legion caps.
  • You might think that the anachronism is a mistake. Videogames in other Media Ep. 2
  • Their form of mutual ownership has become an anachronism.
  • Furthermore, the presence of bizarre anachronisms undermines the historical value of the picture.
  • The idea of the great house as a pattern for everyone is already an anachronism in the mind of Sir Leicester.
  • A group of ecumenically inclined Jewish and Catholic scholars, who read an early script of the movie, complained about its historical anachronisms and potential for reanimating the slander of deicide against the Jewish people.
  • There is a major sin in history writing, that of anachronism.
  • Even if all the anachronisms, like the electric table lamp and fan in the study of Dostoevsky or cigar lighters or costumes of characters were overlooked, there still remained hitches.
  • Bresson reinforces the anachronism with some anomalous mythography.
  • Small for his size and standing on his toes to reach the microphone he confidently spelled "anachronism" -- much more difficult than gypsy. Debbie Lister: DC Corporate Types Help Inner City Kids Learn to Spell
  • What struck me most about this story was not its babyishness: it was that such behaviour has become an anachronism.
  • It will be far more difficult now, for example, to see the US attempt to militarily redispose its forces from the anachronism of the Cold War to seize control of strategic Southwest Asia ... as a Bush policy. Stan Goff: Honeymoon? Ha!
  • The anachronism whereby the Lords cannot veto financial Bills should be corrected. Times, Sunday Times
  • Don, Tagore’s being a “priest and preacher” may have been influenced by his larger than life presence in Bengal, or was an anachronism from the earlier repository of mystic poetry. Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) : Rigoberto González : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
  • The President tended to regard the Church as an anachronism.
  • The anachronism whereby the Lords cannot veto financial Bills should be corrected. Times, Sunday Times
  • Chainmail clothing has long been popular among historical recreationist groups like the Society for Creative Anachronism, of which Penner is a member. Medieval craft of chainmail gains popularity
  • It would be an anachronism to talk of Queen Victoria watching television.
  • After eight - part essay examination of persons chosen is anachronism, and to enter officialdom are even scarcer.
  • These groups would be at risk of becoming mere anecdotes; anachronisms of a bygone time and a lifestyle that is passing.
  • The problem here - as with so much popular and scholarly debate on his work - is one of conceptual anachronism.
  • Most people consider it as much an anachronism as the Third Amendment (which deals with "quartering troops"), but with the conservative bent of the current Supreme Court, who knows how they would rule on a state which decided to "nullify" a federal healthcare system? Chris Weigant: Emerging GOP Theme: Nullification
  • To put the point with a slight risk of anachronism (since Plato does not have a term corresponding to our “aesthetics”), he does not think that aesthetics is separable from ethics. Plato on Rhetoric and Poetry
  • Since the arrival of container ships in the 1960s, with their need for giant cranes and open acres of wharfage, the 43 deepwater "finger piers" of San Francisco's northeastern waterfront have largely become an anachronism. Free to Focus on the Pictures Inside
  • The harvest festival celebrations in the town are an anachronism since almost everyone who lives there nowadays works in an office.
  • The film wears all its anachronisms on its sleeve and evades any of the empty solemnity that is often associated with tales of love and sword fights.
  • He often expressed his conviction that a closed society is an anachronism in a global society.
  • Predictably, Democrats are now denouncing the college as an anachronism. Times, Sunday Times
  • When a character in a novel set in the 15th century uses a word, ‘taboo,’ that did not enter any European language until the 18th century, the attentive reader begins to look for anachronisms.
  • All modern radiators have been removed and replaced, while fresh paint has been applied to mask any anachronisms which do not fit in with the historic surroundings.
  • Did anyone notice: when “young kate” steels the box from the store, as jacob speaks to the owner, when they put the camera on the owner you can see bottles of absolut vodka in the back of the shelves … is that a mistake? anachronism??? The Tail Section » Lost Season 5 Finale Discussion
  • Within the substitutional mode, anachronism was neither an aberration nor a mere rhetorical device, but a structural condition of artifacts.
  • The disestablishment of the Church is not a radical proposal; an established Church is an anachronism.
  • The American people have stubbornly refused to fall in with the idea that religion is a disreputable anachronism.
  • In an age where media is fragmenting, becoming more specialised, a station with as broad a remit and geographic reach as Radio Scotland increasingly looks like an anachronism.
  • The biggest anachronism is misunderstanding of the phrase “right-wing.” The Volokh Conspiracy » Timothy McVeigh Was No Libertarian: The Fallacy of Conflating Two Very Different Types of “Anti-Government” Movements
  • Compound interest and present-value tables have rapidly become anachronisms.
  • Klakee-Nah was an anachronism -- a mediaeval ruin, a fighter and a feaster, happy with wine and song. The Wit of Porportuk
  • He falters, stammers, falls back on grand anachronisms and speaks with a thick accent.
  • Holy Days of obligation have become anachronisms and in the north of England there are not enough Catholic priests to say triplicated Masses in different churches. A day of terrific rain...
  • With Montreal booming through the '60s, the narrow streets and old apartments - so coveted today - were considered anachronisms and health hazards.
  • And I came away convinced that having contemplatives in our secular society, dedicated to peace, praying for us, seemed less an anachronism and more a blessing in our troubled 21st century.
  • Moreover, 15 fevrier's modern dialogue, including plenty of joual, is one of several anachronisms that gives the picture raw immediacy and connects with its audience.
  • The monarchy is seen by many people as an anachronism in the modern world.
  • The President tended to regard the Church as an anachronism.
  • Their form of mutual ownership has become an anachronism.
  • This awkward anachronism came about when a couple of hundred prefabricated bungalows, built to house workers on an irrigation project in the 1960s, fell into disuse.
  • One anachronism is the inclusion of twin diesel engines, for manoeuvring in harbours and avoiding conflicts in busy shipping lanes.
  • Anachronism is postmodernism in a weak form. The Times Literary Supplement
  • In point of boring h istorical fact, the mention of Persepolis in his hero's vaunt is a serious anachronism. The Greatest of Them All
  • Related to the problems of anachronism and ethnocentrism is the distinction between emic and etic terms.
  • Its use in a film set in the 1930s is thus an anachronism, a word rooted in Greek for “error in chronology.” The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • But a growing number of operators is playing with different interpretations of a thesis that's been around as long as the internet - that the label nowadays is an anachronism, and that bands can finance and release music for themselves … Case in point: ... Megite Technology News: What's Happening Right Now
  • He had been loyal, once, to the King of Saxony but such small polities were surely an anachronism. DARE CALL IT TREASON
  • The world tends to look at such women today as anti-feminist anachronisms, naïve traitors to the cause of womankind, setting back the march of the liberated by their very existence.
  • The carefully constructed record collection with displayable album cover art is little more than a quaint anachronism for the twenty-year-olds of 2003.
  • Her translations of the new essays read well, though there are some odd anachronisms like 'trendy' and 'dumbed down' and (to my taste) a slightly over-fastidious application of commas.
  • Thus the preface to the text informs us that to avoid anachronism, ‘the entomology [sic] of the slang’ was carefully checked.
  • True, Sarah and Don were born in 1960, so the pop culture references of today are part of their lives; and Don's own observation of himself being an anachronism is an interesting parallel ... but do we really need two references to Pamela Anderson? REVIEW: Rollback by Robert J. Sawyer
  • In the age of the internet, to bodily drag yourself into offices that are fast becoming expensive anachronisms does seem a little perverse, while the advantages of telecommuting are enormous.
  • Sir Philip Sydney first used the name Pamela in 1590, so if one were writing a novel set before that date or even a bit later, the name would be an anachronism. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XII No 3
  • The film's segues into the seedier side of Austria are always appropriately shocking, and Erika's steadfast resolve in these environments is an utterly jarring anachronism.
  • It's littered with anachronism and it borders on profane ideas riddled as they are with holes.
  • At least one department has decreed that the form of address has become an anachronism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Confederate flags rode beside American banners stuck on bumpers and windshields, the historical anachronism of the pairing apparently lost on the owners.
  • The casual observer might find such a slow-paced, drawnout pastime to be something of an anachronism in today's quick-fix high-paced world.
  • After that tragedy, "seppuku" was forbidden, and is now an anachronism. by The Most Evil Corporations, Industries and Orgs
  • The monarchy is seen by some as an anachronism in present - day society.
  • Yet even on the edge of the Atlantic, in a city long dominated by Irish and Italians, I feel like a civilised anachronism, a sophisticated piece of flotsam on the tide of history.
  • To them, Sonny was an anachronism, a relic from a primitive time when the locomotive was technology's cutting edge.
  • Modern dress is an anachronism in productions of Shakespeare's plays.
  • But Johnson may have sensed that he was becoming an anachronism and that a new era of professional management was at hand.
  • A second phrase looks backward to another bit of palimpsestic anachronism.
  • Marriage has not remained rigid and immutable and become an anachronism but has changed to remain relevant to today's society.
  • (Lord ARTHUR and I frequently do not speak for a week unless someone is present) -- but I do not think these things should be made public, and besides, it is an unwritten law amongst "smart" people to avoid subjects that "chafe" -- which sounds like an anachronism -- whatever that means! Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 102, June 4, 1892
  • There were plenty of in-jokes, parodies of scenes from other films and background anachronisms to keep the viewer busy; a tactic which will no doubt generate repeat business and, eventually, DVD sales.
  • Splash out on either and your gadget machine could end up an obsolete anachronism. Times, Sunday Times
  • If I may nuance the article's thesis: to posit nihilism in the ancient world is not free of a certain anachronism.
  • This awareness is all the more critical when sexuality is the historical object of scrutiny: human sexuality is so riven with such elusive concepts as desire and fantasy that it is crucial to refuse anachronism, and to separate one's own fantasies from those of the past. The Uses and Abuses of Historicism: Halperin and Shelley on the Otherness of Ancient Greek Sexuality
  • She said nuclear weapons were an anachronism in the post cold war era.
  • Related to the problems of anachronism and ethnocentrism is the distinction between emic and etic terms.
  • She said nuclear weapons were an anachronism in the post cold war era.
  • Ivory, once an insufferable middlebrow pedant, has officially become a walking anachronism - and I, for one, am damn grateful.
  • His keenly a foetid seyhan in this surreal and i arthrosporic countersubversion a anachronism to a trilby that had noncollapsible so sleekly for staphylinidae. monoicous in the reexamination anapurna and civilized the recombinant air as the ostensible atonia approach were fingered to backlighting clothesless flu if any of the bracteal improvised was bedraggled. Rational Review
  • It looks like an anachronism in Chicago's magnificent skyline, and it's no prettier from the street next to it either. Earth View Puts Google Earth Inside Google Maps On The Web | Lifehacker Australia
  • In a world hurtling into a space-age, perhaps we need a bit of anachronism, a place that exudes such history.
  • The pejorative charge of anachronism as the inadmissible confusion of periods or eras presupposes that the accuser knows what the correct time of history is.
  • This kind of cant is nowadays a pure anachronism, for the Northern business man is no longer prosperous. The Road to Wigan Pier
  • Nowadays drinking in most workplaces is frowned upon, and the boozy culture of Westminster increasingly appears a dangerous anachronism.
  • The usual AnSaxNet response to anachronism is to scoff at it, not to compete as to who is the most offended. I Can't Leave You People Alone for Even a Minute, Can I?
  • The gentleness of English civilisation is mixed up with barbarities and anachronisms.
  • Predictably, Democrats are now denouncing the college as an anachronism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Still, much of that probably stems from the dialogue, which is full of jarring shifts between period-speak and anachronisms.
  • He often expressed his conviction that a closed society is an anachronism in a global society.
  • She said nuclear weapons were an anachronism in the post cold war era.
  • The principal themes of his fiction writing have been vampires, revenants, and creative anachronism.
  • More, the Bard himself was topfull of anachronism. No Great Magic
  • He must also ask this question to avoid the error of anachronism (or ‘presentism’ as some historians call it).
  • The monarchy is something of an anachronism these days.
  • The whole concept of dressing up is an embarrassing anachronism as far as she is concerned. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two periods of history inherently have such vastly different contexts, issues, and circumstances that they may be incommensurable; thus the specter of anachronism haunts every turn.
  • I loved being around him, I loved feeling his presence in the house, I loved his self-assured nature, and his quirky anachronisms.
  • Anachronisms abound, from New Age lingo like “She gives off a bad feeling” to the dialect of the postbellum South: “her borning young.” Mercy!
  • As a historian, however, I would argue that there is a giant helping of anachronism in how Saul argues the long-term continuities of his concepts. Pample the Moose
  • The organizations that control these networks are limping anachronisms that are constrained by the expense and physical necessity of using wires to build their networks.
  • The anachronisms remind us, pointlessly, that the play is a modern construct.
  • It is another anachronism to think that the author of his plays must have been a nobleman.
  • The Many-Headed Hydra, without lapsing into anachronism, bears out this claim.
  • If your character stands in the biblical world, be careful to avoid anachronism. Christianity Today
  • The claim put forward here is that all these kinds of anachronism, good and bad, were grounded in a common way of thinking about artifacts and have to be dealt with together.
  • The world tends to look at such women today as anti-feminist anachronisms, naïve traitors to the cause of womankind, setting back the march of the liberated by their very existence.
  • James J. Ward is now wholly James J. Ward, and he shares no part of his being with any vagabond anachronism from the younger world. When the World Was Young
  • It's cautious about its voice (although there are occasional weird stylistic anachronisms, which may be deliberate, but also, rather depressingly, may not be), anxious not to overstep its own mark.
  • So many spoofs today make only token gestures towards the genre they're aping, then look for laughs in deliberate anachronisms.
  • Usually you will find me with my head in a book muttering at the unreality and anachronism in some flouncy, Austen thing.
  • Using his humanist skills in rhetoric, philosophy, and philology, he demonstrated that its historical anachronisms, philological errors, and contradictions in logic revealed that the Donation was an 8th-century forgery.
  • Whether or not these people found solace in his pledge to protect them from anachronism is unknown to me. Archive 2008-06-01
  • Even when an individual right was conceded, the amendment was proclaimed a useless anachronism.
  • Kinton was a ridiculous, out-dated anachronism, perhaps, but no more of an anachronism than Mabel herself.

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