Citations:solœcistic

Adjective:

 * 1817, Richard Watson quoted in The Quarterly Review, John Murray; Volume XVIII., page #239:
 * His majestic and commanding figure, his terrific countenance, his deep sonorous voice, the uninterrupted tenor of his sentences, which, though far from classic, were never barbarous or solœcistic, and, above all, the boldness and originality of his sentiments seldom left the graudates’ places unoccupied in the theological school.
 * 1837, S. T. Bloomfield, The Greek Testament, Perkins and Marvin; second edition, Volume I., page #166:
 * The sense is, “ as often as they say him,” which Fritz. pronounces to be solœcistic[…]
 * 1876, Joseph Barber Lightfoot quoted in Cambridge Sermons, Macmillan and Co.; pages 274–275:
 * This itinerant Jew, speaking with a foreign accent, breaking loose from all the approved forms of logic, defying all the established laws of rhetoric in his halting, tumultuous, solœcistic utterances—how could he hope to recommend his message to the fine ear and the fastidious taste of the Greek ?
 * 1881, Frederic William Farrar, The Early Days of Christianity, Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co.; Volume II., Chapter XXVIII., § V., page #296:
 * His solœcistic Greek was sufficient to prove that the language was unfamiliar to him, and that all persons of whom he thought would primarily present themselves to his mind by their Hebrew designations.