The Library of Congress yanked President Trump’s official inauguration portrait from its online store because of a glaring typo on the souvenir print.

“No dream is too big, no challenge is to great. Nothing we want for the future is beyond our reach,” read Trump’s quote on the poster – misspelling the second “too” as “to.”

The page selling the $16.95 poster was removed between 9:30 and 10 p.m. Sunday, The Hill reported.

The Library of Congress described the print as capturing “the essence of Donald Trump’s campaign for the presidency of the United States.”

During and after his presidential campaign, the commander-in-tweet came up with some spelling doozies of his own: “shoker” for shocker, “big honer” for honor and “unpresidented seizure” for unprecedented.

The twitterati quickly spotted, and mocked, the embarrassing error, an archived version of which remained accessible through the Internet Archive website.

“No joke: Purchasable copy of Trump’s Inauguration Print, direct from the Library of Congress site. A 5th grader would’ve spotted this typo,” wrote @paulm4749.

“‘Captures the essence of Trump’s campaign’ ‘to great.’” @noclador said.

And @stephenlautens added: “Get’cher official Trump print from the Library of Congress. Extra ‘o’ in ‘too’ available separately.”

It was the latest in a series of grammatical gaffes that have bedeviled Trump and his nascent presidency.

The Education Department misspelled the name of W.E.B. Du Bois as “W.E.B DeBois” on Twitter Sunday.

The department then mangled its mea culpa as “Our deepest apologizes.”

A week ago, the White House released a list of 78 terror attacks, in which Denmark was spelled “Denmakr” and San Bernardino was spelled “San Bernadino.”