deduco
dē-dūcō
dūxī, ductus, ere
(imper. deduc, C.; deduce, T.), to lead
away, draw out, turn aside, divert, bring out, remove, drive off, draw down: atomos de viā: eum contionari conantem de rostris,
drag down, Cs.: aliquem ex ultimis gentibus: summā vestem
ab orā, O.: Cantando rigidas montibus
ornos, V.: canendo cornua lunae, i. e. bring to
light (from eclipse), O.: dominam Ditis thalamo, V.:
tota carbasa malo, i. e. unfurl, O.: febrīs corpore, H.: molliunt clivos, ut
elephanti deduci possent, L.: rivos, i. e. to
clear out, V.: aqua Albana deducta ad utilitatem agri,
conducted off: imbres deducunt Iovem, i. e. Jupiter
descends in, etc., H.: crinīs pectine, to comb,
O.: vela, O.: deductae est fallacia
Lunae, Pr.: hunc ad militem, T.: suas vestīs
umero ad pectora, O.: in mare undas, O.:
alqm in conspectum (Caesaris), Cs.: ab augure deductus in arcem, L.: aliquem in
carcerem, S.: mediā sulcum deducis
harenā, i. e. are dragged to execution, Iu.—Of troops,
to draw off, lead off, withdraw, lead, conduct, bring: nostros de
valle, Cs.: ab opere legiones, Cs.: finibus Attali exercitum, L.: praesidia, Cs.: legionibus in hiberna deductis,
Cs.: in aciem, L.: neque more militari
vigiliae deducebantur, S.—Of colonists, to lead forth, conduct:
coloni lege Iuliā Capuam deducti, Cs.:
milites in colonias: triumvir coloniis deducendis, S.:
illi qui initio deduxerant, the founders,
N.—Of ships, to draw out (from the dock): ex navalibus eorum (navem), Cs.:
Deducunt socii navīs, V.—To draw
down, launch: celoces viginti, L.: neque
multum abesse (navīs) ab eo, quin paucis diebus deduci possent,
Cs.: navīs litore, V.: carinas, O.: deducendus in mare, set adrift, Iu.
— To bring into port: navīs in portum,
Cs.—In weaving, to draw out, spin out: pollice
filum, O.: fila, Ct.: stamina colo,
Tb.—Poet.: vetus in tela deducitur argumentum, is interwoven, O.
— Of personal attendance, in gen., to lead, conduct, escort, accompany:
te domum: me de domo: deducendi sui causā populum de
foro abducere, L.: quem luna solet deducere,
Iu.: deducam, will be his escort, H. — To conduct
a young man to a public teacher: a patre deductus ad
Scaevolam.—Of a bride, to lead, conduct (to her husband): uni
nuptam, ad quem virgo deducta sit, L.: domum in cubiculum,
to take home, T.: quo primum virgo quaeque deducta est,
Cs.—To lead in procession, conduct, show: deduci superbo
triumpho, H.—In law, to eject, exclude, put out of possession (a
claimant of land): ut aut ipse Tullium deduceret aut ab eo deduceretur: de fundo
deduci.—To expel, exclude: alqm ex possessione,
L.—To summon, bring (as a witness): ad hoc iudicium.—To take away,
subtract, withdraw, deduct, diminish: cibum, T.: addendo deducendoque videre, quae reliqui summa fiat: de capite, quod
usuris pernumeratum est, L.— Fig., to bring down, lead away,
divert, withdraw, bring, lead, derive, deduce, reduce: alqm de animi
lenitate: alqm de fide: me a verā accusatione: mos unde
deductus, derived, H.: nomen ab Anco, O.:
alqm ad fletum: rem ad arma, Cs.: ad
humum maerore, bows, H.: ad sua flagra
Quirites, subdue under, Iu.: in eum casum deduci, Cs.:
rem in controversiam, Cs.: rem huc,
ut, etc., Cs.: audi, quo rem deducam, what I
have in view, H.: Aeolium carmen ad Italos modos, transfer,
H.: in patriam deducere musas, V.—To mislead,
seduce, entice, induce, bring, instigate: adulescentibus oratione
deductis, Cs.: a quibus (inimicis) deductus,
Cs.—To spin out, string out, compose (poet.): tenui deducta poëmata
filo, H.: mille die versūs, H.: nihil expositum, Iu: carmen in actūs, H. —
To remove, expel, cure: corpore febrīs, H.:
haec (vitia) deducuntur de corpore, i. e. men try to
remove.