WordLens

anachronism

1 of 1noun
/əˈnækrəˌnɪzəm/
Forms:anachronisms
1

an object from one time period appearing in another where it does not belong

  • The film featured a wristwatch—an obvious anachronism in a medieval setting.
  • That Roman soldier's sunglasses were a glaring anachronism.
  • The novel's use of smartphones in the 1800s was a clear anachronism.
  • A typewriter in a futuristic lab would be an odd anachronism.
  • The painting included an anachronism: a modern skyscraper in ancient Athens.
2

something occurring at a time when it could not have existed or happened

C2
  • The speech referenced events that hadn't yet occurred—an unintentional anachronism.
  • The timeline of the story was riddled with anachronisms.
  • That law was cited centuries before it was written, an obvious anachronism.
  • The historian corrected several anachronisms in the manuscript.
  • The character's knowledge of future events created deliberate anachronisms.
3

someone whose behavior, beliefs, or style feels more suited to a different era

  • He's a charming anachronism, still writing letters by hand.
  • Her values made her feel like an anachronism in the modern workplace.
  • The professor, with his tweed and fountain pen, was a lovable anachronism.
  • She's an anachronism—preferring vinyl records and rotary phones.
  • His chivalrous manners seemed like an anachronism in today's dating scene.