The Library of Congress is no longer selling a poster that makes a grammar mistake in one of President Donald Trump’s quotes.
The inauguration print read: “No dream is too big, no challenge is to great. Nothing we want for the future is beyond our reach.”
But “to great,” should be “too great,” as folks on social media quickly proceeded to point out on Sunday evening.
No joke: Purchasable copy of Trump’s Inauguration Print, direct from the Library of Congress site. A 5th grader would’ve spotted this typo. pic.twitter.com/zomWsMojYV
— Jules Winnfield (@paulm4749) February 12, 2017
The library described the poster as capturing “the essence of Donald Trump’s campaign for presidency of the United States.” It’s since removed the print from its online store, the Associated Press reports (the Internet Archive website has an archived version).
It’s the latest in a string of typos related to the new administration.
On Sunday morning, the U.S. Department of Education misspelled the name of civil rights activist W.E.B. DuBois in an initial tweet, as well as misspelling “apologies” in a post addressing the mistake.
Education must not simply teach work – it must teach life. – W.E.B. DeBois pic.twitter.com/Re4cWkPSFA
— US Dept of Education (@usedgov) February 12, 2017
Last week, the White House’s list of 78 “underreported” terror attacks since 2014 that included multiple mistakes, including the word “attacker” written “attaker” 27 times and misspelling San Bernardino, California.
.@POTUS You can’t even spell #SanBernardino but you exploit our community to justify your #muslimban.
— Rep. Pete Aguilar (@RepPeteAguilar) February 7, 2017