Relict in a sentence as a noun

Yeah the song is a relict of PLC times.

"Is this just a relict from the past or is this a showstopper for me?

... This "relict stress" theory implies that the ringing rock boulders act much like a guitar string.

Is a relict forest from a much more humid Australia.

To bad it lost momentum and seems an awesome relict inside of Mozilla.

ARM64 is a brand new ISA, it's the x86 ISA that is a relict from the times when processors were programmed with microcode.

Very interesting that they seem to have picked them up from a relict population - perhaps this is related to the Yeti stories?

The article claims that "The plant is a relict, an ancient hanger-on from a time just after the death of the dinosaurs" -- I'd like to know what is meant by that sentence that isn't equally true for **** sapiens.

Maybe a bit of a controversial statement but I think learning grammar in a formal language learning setting is a relict of the past and mainly exists to assert the reasoning behind formal learning itself.

> If there were populations with significant relict Neanderthal DNA, you'd be looking at more like the Celt/Gaul populations, and talking at least a thousand years before that -- think the British isles, before the Angles/Saxons moved in.

Think of film; Hollywood, Bollywood, China, Japan, and a few relict European national markets largely reflect barriers imposed by language, culture, politics, and explicit local policies and subsidies.

Perhaps it's a sign of the times, but when I read, "Experts assure that there will be no penetration of air from the atmosphere in the relict lake and there is no threat to its ecology," I feel like it's guaranteed that we'll find a way to do exactly that.

Relict definitions

noun

an organism or species surviving as a remnant of an otherwise extinct flora or fauna in an environment much changed from that in which it originated

noun

geological feature that is a remnant of a pre-existing formation after other parts have disappeared