One anachronism is the inclusion of twin diesel engines, for manoeuvring in harbours and avoiding conflicts in busy shipping lanes. |
|
In the course of discussing this last category, he directly engaged the topic of anachronism. |
|
It could help to deflect the usual charges of anachronism and unfamiliarity with the period. |
|
Usually you will find me with my head in a book muttering at the unreality and anachronism in some flouncy, Austen thing. |
|
In a world hurtling into a space-age, perhaps we need a bit of anachronism, a place that exudes such history. |
|
Instead, he decided that anachronism would be a major theme and encouraged the actors to avoid affecting British accents. |
|
For many, religion per se has become a curious historical anachronism, a dated relic of the old days. |
|
It's littered with anachronism and it borders on profane ideas riddled as they are with holes. |
|
I delivered a paper on anachronism and identification in Aristotle and Freud a million years ago at a conference in New York. |
|
It's difficult to tell when this anachronism is deliberate, and when it is merely a lack of writerly control. |
|
Does the rule that a legislator be present to vote make sense, or is it merely an anachronism? |
|
The principal themes of his fiction writing have been vampires, revenants, and creative anachronism. |
|
It is another anachronism to think that the author of his plays must have been a nobleman. |
|
I often feel I am an anachronism, that I would be more at home at the turn of the century than today. |
|
Marriage has not remained rigid and immutable and become an anachronism but has changed to remain relevant to today's society. |
|
Within the substitutional mode, anachronism was neither an aberration nor a mere rhetorical device, but a structural condition of artifacts. |
|
To them, Sonny was an anachronism, a relic from a primitive time when the locomotive was technology's cutting edge. |
|
The principal themes of Holland's fiction writing have been vampires, revenants, and creative anachronism. |
|
The Many-Headed Hydra, without lapsing into anachronism, bears out this claim. |
|
Related to the problems of anachronism and ethnocentrism is the distinction between emic and etic terms. |
|
|
The American people have stubbornly refused to fall in with the idea that religion is a disreputable anachronism. |
|
Even when an individual right was conceded, the amendment was proclaimed a useless anachronism. |
|
I can't say that voicing the opinion that the legal system is a dated anachronism is remotely close to sanctionable behavior. |
|
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. |
|
Nowadays drinking in most workplaces is frowned upon, and the boozy culture of Westminster increasingly appears a dangerous anachronism. |
|
Now that the state picks up the tab, the ownership structure is an uncomfortable anachronism. |
|
The system in place up to now is an anachronism from the times of agricultural overproduction, which fortunately are now a thing of the past. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
This down-at-the-heels outfit is first presented as an anachronism, playing to half-empty houses in tank towns. |
|
Entering a wine shop I discovered a Michelin poster of this era, which anachronism with the wooden wheel of a log carriage. |
|
He must also ask this question to avoid the error of anachronism. |
|
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. |
|
But one anachronism that would make the world a better place is the midfield schemer. |
|
Anne, like a Swiss Family Robinson child picking up Pepsi cans, feels like an anachronism, and yet the environmental message is highly relevant. |
|
It is not only an anachronism in terms of history, but also an insult to the future of the world. |
|
I am not turning this into a matter of national honour, nor is this the moment to condemn the territorial anachronism represented by Gibraltar. |
|
Not involving representatives of the people is an anachronism in treaty ratification. |
|
Rules and institutions are changed only after practice, which enters into relations with them, reveal their anachronism. |
|
It is forcing its population to live under an ideology which most of the world regards as an anachronism. |
|
|
In an increasingly liberal environment, a system of terminal dues is an anachronism and must be removed and replaced by competitive pricing. |
|
It is up to the Assembly to abolish this anachronism completely by speaking out in favour of openness and against exclusion. |
|
I feel that the nationality requirement is an anachronism after the conclusion of the Union Treaty. |
|
These days, says another former top studio executive, puts are an anachronism. |
|
Confederate flags rode beside American banners stuck on bumpers and windshields, the historical anachronism of the pairing apparently lost on the owners. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
There is a major sin in history writing, that of anachronism. |
|
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. |
|
And therefore, Dorothy Dunnett is absolved of any taint of anachronism. |
|
Bresson reinforces the anachronism with some anomalous mythography. |
|
I have long held the view that A-Levels are an embarrassing anachronism, just another mechanism for separating the privileged from the unprivileged. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
A second phrase looks backward to another bit of palimpsestic anachronism. |
|
Essentially, the Conference is confined to that environment, and it needs to address challenges in a creative and unconventional way, a way that goes far beyond the anachronism that is the cold war mentality. |
|
But Tony Blair's method of ending the absurd anachronism that gives the peers voting rights looks almost as if it is designed to maximise controversy. |
|
Puerto Rico is a political anachronism, a throwback to the days of gunboat diplomacy and the handlebar mustache. |
|
The fact of the matter is that ever since Hiroshima and Nagasaki we have known that war is an anachronism for reasons the member herself has elaborated upon. |
|
He also drew pictures of weird and demoniac quality and, being of a haughty disposition and an eccentric, was regarded by many as either a madman or an anachronism. |
|
|
For Garber, these judgments miss what is elementally fascinating about anachronism. |
|
However, this third degree is an anachronism from the 19th century and is not registerable with the Irish Medical Council. |
|
Brown rejected the label feudalism as an anachronism that imparts a false sense of uniformity to the concept. |
|
With the rise of the French independent nuclear weapons by 1960 the line became an expensive anachronism. |
|
In today's situation this is an incomprehensible anachronism. |
|
Chaplin finished editing City Lights in December 1930, by which time silent films were an anachronism. |
|
Not so many years ago China was often seen as an exotic region in the world that was apart and distant, either as a rural anachronism or a curious experiment in politics. |
|
In tax terms, the main taxes are those on individuals and companies as well as, in particular, withholding taxes and turnover tax, which is an anachronism in international terms. |
|
The anachronism of extensive immunity is reinforced by the difficulty of implementing the appropriate legal tools for transnational prosecution of senior politicians. |
|
On the other hand, the federal government, through the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, administers an Indian Act universally held to be an anachronism surviving from a colonial past. |
|
Far from a marginal expression or an anachronism doomed to disappear, urban agriculture is destined to play an ever greater role in feeding city dwellers. |
|
Instead the play focuses on Don Juan as an aristocratic anachronism, a vestige of a dead age who has nothing left to do but play games and exercise his droit de seigneur. |
|
He's an old-fashioned politician who is seen by many of his colleagues as an anachronism. |
|