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Archaic   /ɑrkˈeɪɪk/   Listen
Archaic

adjective
1.
So extremely old as seeming to belong to an earlier period.  Synonyms: antediluvian, antiquated.  "Antediluvian ideas" , "Archaic laws"
2.
Little evolved from or characteristic of an earlier ancestral type.  Synonym: primitive.  "Primitive mammals" , "The okapi is a short-necked primitive cousin of the giraffe"






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"Archaic" Quotes from Famous Books



... boils with passion and because it prevents his appreciating class differences, makes him a conservative element in our national life, but one always big with the danger of a blind servitude to traditions and archaic social judgments. The thinking of the farmer may be either substantial from his sense of personal sufficiency or backward from his lack of contact. The decision regarding his attitude is made by ...
— Rural Problems of Today • Ernest R. Groves

... misapprehension of their true meaning; nay, he sometimes makes new ones by unlawfully grafting a scion of Romance on a Teutonic root. His theory, caught from Bellay, of rescuing good archaisms from unwarranted oblivion, was excellent; not so his practice of being archaic for the mere sake of escaping from the common and familiar. A permissible archaism is a word or phrase that has been supplanted by something less apt, but has not become unintelligible; and Spenser's often needed a glossary, ...
— Among My Books • James Russell Lowell

... appearance here, and compels us to travel an inconveniently long distance back in the context to find an antecedent to the 'his' and 'him' of our text. It seems to be more in consonance, therefore, with the archaic style of the whole narrative, and to yield a profounder and worthier meaning, if we recognise the boldness of the metaphor, and take 'sin' as the subject of the whole. Now all this puts in concrete, metaphorical shape, suited to the stature of the bearers, great and solemn truths. ...
— Expositions of Holy Scripture - Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers • Alexander Maclaren

... the last syllable): term applied to the people of certain settlements in Western Pennsylvania, from their use of the archaic form, Quo' he. ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 25, November, 1859 • Various

... published Story of Early Gaelic Literature, attention is directed to the curious eastern and pantheistic character of some archaic verse. Critics are for ever trying to show how some one particular antique race was the first begetter of religion and mystic symbolism. Perplexed by the identity between the myths and traditions of different countries, they look now here, now there, for the original. But it was not in any ...
— AE in the Irish Theosophist • George William Russell


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