subduco
sub-dūcō
dūxī
(subdūxtī, T.), ductus, ere, to
draw away, take away, lead away, carry off, wrest, withdraw, remove: lapidibus ex turri subductis, Cs.: rerum fundamenta:
capiti ensem, V.: cibum athletae: Aenean manibus
Graium, V.—Of troops, to draw off, remove, transfer, detach, detail:
cohortes subductae e dextro cornu, L.: subductis ordinibus, L.: copias in proximum
collem, Cs.: agmen in aequiorem locum,
L.—To take secretly, remove by stealth, steal, hide: subducta viatica plorat, H.: obsides furto,
L.—With pron reflex., to withdraw stealthily, steal away:
te mihi, T.: de circulo se: se ab
ipso Volnere, O.: clam se, N.: quā se subducere colles Incipiunt, i. e. to slope down
gradually, V.—To draw from under, bring from below, pull up, lift up, raise:
cataractam funibus, L.: subductis
(tunicis), pulled up, H.—Of ships, to haul up, bring out of
water, beach: longas navīs in aridum, Cs.:
naves in campo Martio subductae, L.: classis subducta ad Gytheum.—Fig., to cast up, reckon, compute,
calculate, balance: summam: rationibus subductis: calculis subductus:
bene subductā ratione, T.