Solécisme draws its name from the town of Soles, famous in the ancient Greece for its Grammaire Fantaisiste.
In Rhetoric, the solecism is the construction of a Phrase which does not obey the rules of Grammaire devoted to a given moment (agreement, Syntaxe, etc.), whereas the components of this sentence exist in addition in the language: “I am been” for “I went” .
If the word word or group does not exist or is deformed, it is then a Barbarisme.
The Anacoluthe can be a syntactic solecism if it is faulty.
Employee voluntarily, for example with an aim of making laugh, Solécisme is a Stylistic device; with the daily newspaper it is generally an involuntary fault.
to remember something (instead of to remember something , the verb is transitive direct)
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