heteroclite

Definitions

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

  • adjective In grammar, irregular in inflection. Hence, deviating from ordinary forms or rules; irregular; anomalous.
  • noun In grammar, a word which is irregular or anomalous in declension or conjugation, or which deviates from the ordinary forms of inflection in words of a like kind. It is applied particularly to nouns having forms from different stems.
  • noun A person or thing that deviates from the regular or proper form.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

  • noun A word whose etymological roots come from distinct, different languages or language groups.

Examples

  • Nicolas Sarkozy, French to his fingertips despite his heteroclite background two parts Hungarian, one part Greek/Jewish and one part French/French, seems to have absorbed the first, but not the second, of the above two maxims.

    Dr. Charles G. Cogan: Toujours de l'Audace!

  • Over the years Amis has learned how to notate a superbly comic speaking voice; getting it down on paper is comparable to a good composer's skill in scoring heteroclite sounds never before made by concert instruments.

    Martin Amis's 'The Pregnant Widow' Is A 'Strange, Sparkling Novel' (New York Review)

  • That makes the in-color onlooker the heteroclite, and the urbane aesthetic cellist the metroclite.

    Heteroclite.

  • These instances might with propriety be reckoned among singular or heteroclite instances, for in the whole extent of nature they are of rare and extraordinary occurrence.

    The New Organon

  • Nor could I have dreamed the heteroclite crewmen I had met aboard Tzadkiel's ship, nor the jibers; and yet both had come from Briah, even as I; and Tzadkiel had not scrupled to take them into his service.

    The Urth of the New Sun

  • But even where he walked, amid a society intellectually fostering sentiment, in a land bowing to see the simplicity of the mystery paraded, Alvan's behaviour was passing heteroclite.

    The Tragic Comedians — Complete

  • On the other hand, the heteroclite array of the dancers of the night before, torn from their slumbers, appeared in fantastic and ridiculous outline like the shades of a magic lantern; shawls, rugs, and even bed-quilts wrapped around them.

    Tartarin On The Alps

Note

The word 'heteroclite' comes ultimately from a Greek word meaning 'to bend, incline'.