subeo
sub-eō
iī
(-īvit, O.; -īvimus, Ta.), itus,
īre, to come under, go under, enter: in nemoris
latebras, O.: cum luna sub orbem solis subisset,
L.: tectum, i. e. enter a house, Cs.: Triviae lucos atque aurea tecta, V.: cavum
artum, H.: paludem, i. e. plunge into, O.:
aquam, Cu.: si subeuntur prospera
castra, Iu.—Poet., with dat: portu Chaonio, V.—To come up, advance, ascend, draw near,
approach: subeunt herbae, spring up, V.: in adversos montīs, L.: testudine
factā subeunt, press forward, Cs.: subeundum
erat ad hostīs, L.: saxa ingerit in
subeuntīs, climbing, L.: amne, i.
e. sail up, Cu.: mixtum flumini subibat mare, i. e. was
against them, Cu.: aciem subeuntium muros adgrediuntur, L.:
subimus Inpositum saxis Auxur, H.: Umbra subit terras, comes over, O.: Fadumque
Herbesumque, i. e. attack, V.—Poet., with dat:
muro subibant, V.—To go under, support, take
up, submit to: pars ingenti subiere feretro, i. e. carried
on their shoulders, V.: Ipse subibo umeris, i. e. will take
you up on, V.: currum dominae subiere leones, were
harnessed to, V.: umeris parentem, V.—In order or
time, to come under, come after, succeed, follow, take the place of: Pone subit coniunx, V.: subit ipse meumque Explet
opus, takes my place, O.: furcas subiere
columnae, took the place of, O.: subeuntes alii aliis in
custodiam, relieving, L.; cf. subit esse priori Causa recens,
O.—To slip under, elude: Aeneae mucronem,
V.—To come stealthily, steal on, approach imperceptibly: subeunt morbi tristisque senectus, V.: subit Iumina
fessa sopor, O.—Fig., to come upon, overtake: sua deinde paenitentia subiit regem, Cu.—In the mind, to come
up, be thought of, enter, occur, suggest itself, recur: omnes
sententiae sub acumen stili subeant necesse est: cum subeant audita et cognita
nobis, O.: subiit cari genitoris imago . . . subiit deserta
Creusa, V.: Subit, hanc arcana profana Detexisse
manu, O.: dein cogitatio animum subiit, indignum
esse, etc., L.: mentem subit, quo praemia facto,
etc., O.: horum cogitatio subibat exercitum,
Cu.—To subject oneself to, take upon oneself, undergo, submit to, sustain,
accept, endure, suffer: omnes terrores: quis est non ultro
subeundus dolor?: inimicitiae subeantur: maiora Verbera, H.: multitudinis inperitae iudicium esse subeundum: eorum odium: peregrinos
ritūs novā subeunte fortunā, Cu.