anach·ro·nism
ə-ˈna-krə-ˌni-zəm
1
: an error in chronology
especially
: a chronological misplacing of persons, events, objects, or customs in regard to each other
found several anachronisms in the movie
2
: a person or a thing that is chronologically out of place
especially
: one from a former age that is incongruous in the present
By the time I reached my teens, the housewife was an anachronism, replaced on television by the perky, glamorous, character of That Girl, Marlo Thomas, who kept her boyfriend at bay in the interest of pursuing her acting career. —
Joyce Maynard
I think the concept of the draft is an anachronism from the time before laptops and word processing software. —
Sarah Manguso
3
: the state or condition of being chronologically out of place
anachronously
adverb
anach·ro·nis·tic
ə-¦na-krə-¦ni-stik
variants
or less commonly anachronistical
ə-¦na-krə-¦ni-sti-kəl
: characterized by or involving anachronism : chronologically out of place
Ships are tied up with what the rest of the world would call ropes. They look anachronistic—like rope you would see in a seaport museum, but larger.—
John McPhee, The New Yorker, 26 Mar. 1990
Bernstein's notion of jazz, rooted in the thirties, was already anachronistic in 1944, and became more so later on.—
David Schiff, The Atlantic, June 1993
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Merriam-Webster unabridged



