What is another word for anachronisms?

Pronunciation: [anˈakɹənˌɪzəmz] (IPA)

An anachronism is a literary or historical error in which something from a different time period appears. Some synonyms for anachronisms could be out of date, old-fashioned or outdated. Another synonym could be a relic, something that is no longer in use. Some may also use the term retrograde. A similar word for anachronism is antiquated, which refers to something that is no longer in current use, but was popular in the past. In any case, anachronisms can be found in many forms, from clothing to technology. They can be a great way to add humor or interest to a story or movie.

Synonyms for Anachronisms:

  • Other relevant words:

    Other relevant words (noun):

What are the hypernyms for Anachronisms?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Anachronisms

Shakspeare, who had a royal way of committing anachronisms, made Hamlet live in this place after the introduction of gunpowder, whereas, if any such person ever did exist, it was centuries earlier and hundreds of miles farther north upon the mainland, in what is now Jutland.
"Due North or Glimpses of Scandinavia and Russia"
Maturin M. Ballou
Carrier, Wrexler and I were anachronisms; everything else was in keeping with the dead centuries.
"The Lost Door"
Dorothy Quick
By the old writers, accuracy in these matters was disregarded, and anachronisms were not so much tolerated as unperceived.
"The Legends Of King Arthur And His Knights"
James Knowles

Famous quotes with Anachronisms

  • September 11 was a day of de-Enlightenment. Politics stood revealed as a veritable Walpurgis Night of the irrational. And such old, old stuff. The conflicts we now face or fear involve opposed geographical arenas, but also opposed centuries or even millennia. It is a landscape of ferocious anachronisms: nuclear jihad in the Indian subcontinent; the medieval agonism of Islam; the Bronze Age blunderings of the Middle East.
    Martin Amis
  • Although there are other heresies in , along with puzzles, opacities, loose ends, confusions, errors, exaggerations, and anachronisms galore, they do not detract from the book's relevance to our present troubles. Economists may have forgotten and moved on, but economics has not outgrown it, or the informal mode of argument that it exemplifies, which can illuminate nooks and crannies that are closed to mathematics. Keynes's masterpiece is many things, but "outdated" it is not.
    Richard Posner

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