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dēcessĭo
dēcessĭo, ōnis, f. decedo, a going away, departure (opp. accessio—good prose). Lit. In gen.: is mecum saepe de tua mansione aut decessione communicat, Cic. Fam. 4, 4 fin.— Esp. The withdrawal, retirement of a magistrate from the province he has governed, Cic. Pis. 36, 89; id. Att. 6, 5 fin.; id. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 1.— Pregn., the decrease, diminution, abatement, or entire disappearance of an object: neque enim ulla decessio fieri poterat neque accessio, Cic. Univ. 6: utrum accessionem decumae an decessionem de summa fecerit, id. Rab. Post. 11, 30 sq.; Dig. 29, 4, 28 fin.: decessio capitis aut accessio, Cic. Div. 2, 15, 36: accessio et decessio febris, Cels. 3, 3 fin.; so id. 2, 4 et saep.— Decease: Juliani, Spart. Did. Jul. 7 fin.— * Trop.: verborum, the transition, transferring of words from their primary to a derivative meaning, Gell. 13, 29, 1.

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Headword:
dēcessĭo
Headword (normalized):
dēcessĭo
Headword (normalized/stripped):
decessio
Intro Text:
dēcessĭo, ōnis, f. decedo, a going away, departure (opp. accessio—good prose). Lit. In gen.: is mecum saepe de tua mansione aut decessione communicat, Cic. Fam. 4, 4 fin.— Esp. The withdrawal, retirement of a magistrate from the province he has governed, Cic. Pis. 36, 89; id. Att. 6, 5 fin.; id. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 1.— Pregn., the decrease, diminution, abatement, or entire disappearance of an object: neque enim ulla decessio fieri poterat neque accessio, Cic. Univ. 6: utrum accessionem decumae an decessionem de summa fecerit, id. Rab. Post. 11, 30 sq.; Dig. 29, 4, 28 fin.: decessio capitis aut accessio, Cic. Div. 2, 15, 36: accessio et decessio febris, Cels. 3, 3 fin.; so id. 2, 4 et saep.— Decease: Juliani, Spart. Did. Jul. 7 fin.— * Trop.: verborum, the transition, transferring of words from their primary to a derivative meaning, Gell. 13, 29, 1.
IDX:
12487
URN:
urn:cite2:scaife-viewer:dictionary-entries.atlas_v1:lat.ls.perseus-eng2-n12473
Key:
decessio

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Data

{
  "content": "dēcessĭo, ōnis, f. decedo, a going away, departure (opp. accessio—good prose).  Lit.  In gen.: is mecum saepe de tua mansione aut decessione communicat, Cic. Fam. 4, 4 fin.— Esp.  The withdrawal, retirement of a magistrate from the province he has governed, Cic. Pis. 36, 89; id. Att. 6, 5 fin.; id. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 1.— Pregn., the decrease, diminution, abatement, or entire disappearance of an object: neque enim ulla decessio fieri poterat neque accessio, Cic. Univ. 6: utrum accessionem decumae an decessionem de summa fecerit, id. Rab. Post. 11, 30 sq.; Dig. 29, 4, 28 fin.: decessio capitis aut accessio, Cic. Div. 2, 15, 36: accessio et decessio febris, Cels. 3, 3 fin.; so id. 2, 4 et saep.— Decease: Juliani, Spart. Did. Jul. 7 fin.— *  Trop.: verborum, the transition, transferring of words from their primary to a derivative meaning, Gell. 13, 29, 1.\n",
  "key": "decessio",
  "type": "main"
}