Search for crossword answers and clues
Very old-fashioned
Answer for the clue "Very old-fashioned ", 7 letters:
archaic
Alternative clues for the word archaic
Word definitions for archaic in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. so extremely old as seeming to belong to an earlier period; "a ramshackle antediluvian tenement"; "antediluvian ideas"; "archaic laws" [syn: antediluvian , antiquated ] little evolved from or characteristic of an earlier ancestral type; "archaic forms ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Of or characterized by antiquity; old-fashioned, quaint, antiquated. 2 (context of words English) No longer in ordinary use, though still used occasionally to give a sense of antiquity. 3 (context archaeology Greek) Belonging to the archaic period ...
Usage examples of archaic.
This could also have happened in New Zealand, where a variety of archaic adze types has been found.
His use of final vowels after the noun, and his rejection of the pronoun, which apocope in the Arabic verb renders necessary in the everyday speech of the people, told the Master he was listening to some archaic, uncorrupted form of the language.
His conduct would have sent his interviewers away in bafflement had not the persistently archaic trend of his speech and unmistakable replacement of modern by ancient ideas in his consciousness marked him out as one definitely removed from the normal.
Trailmen speak archaic casta, retaining word forms elsewhere long obsolete.
The text here given is based on the most ancient sources available, some of them apparently dating from the Ages of Chaos to judge from their archaic casta forms.
Henceforth this year would creep toward its low mark ever more slowly, pausing at the zero of solstice, obliquely peering through a certain slit at Stonehenge, and returning dumbly north, climbing the spine of the west, from the caude of Tierra del Fuego up the flex of Cordilleras, ending here, at what would be the nape of the Brooks range, the archaic brainstem of the planet, where, eons ago, a landbridge had offered passage to migrants from the east.
As compared to Greek, Latin grammar and syntax are more archaic, closer to the original Indo-European.
In due time, the Regulus had sent formal notification to the Ard-Righ and all other nearby rulers that, as in archaic times, Ulaid was once more a feoff of the Western Isles of Scotland, its king his vassal and, therefore, henceforth under his fearsome protection.
There were still glyptodonts, not so dissimilar from the huge armored beast that had terrified Roamer, and the top predators were giant flightless birds, just as in archaic times.
Asuit Old Style, an archaic language of Plenimar, which predates the Hierophantic settlements.
It seemed clear that McInturff and his egg-hunting cohorts would either hang me from a willow tree or paddle me out to sea and toss me overboard to the archaic fishes or ichthyosaurs that yet remained.
Before Kirk had gotten his fin of the fascinating architecture around them- a curious and exciting mixture of archaic and ultramodern-they had passed through a very old, heavily guarded gate in the ancient city wall and were kaveling steadily across a broad open plain.
The cynical, contemptuous Brian Neame had caught the malady of the times: patriotism, for him, was archaic.
There was enough Greek in him for him to consider that the gift of her virginity, her purity, was one of the greatest gifts a woman could give to the man she loved, but his cultural heritage from his British father and schooling mocked and even de plored such archaic feelings.
Stealthy horror and disease lurk within the weather-blackened, moss-crusted, and elm-shadowed walls of the archaic dwelling so vividly displayed, and we grasp the brooding malignity of the place when we read that its builder -- old Colonel Pyncheon -- snatched the land with peculiar ruthlessness from its original settler, Matthew Maule, whom he condemned to the gallows as a wizard in the year of the panic.