sedeō sēdī, sessum, ēre
SED-,
to sit
: cum tot summi oratores sedeant,
remain sitting
: sedens iis adsensi: ante forīs,
O.: ducis sub pede, O.: gradu post me uno, H.: plausor
usque sessurus, donec, etc.,
who will keep his place
, H.: Sedilibus in primis eques sedet,
H.: in illā tuā
sedeculā: in saxo, O.: in
conclavi, T.: in temone, Ph.: caelestes sedibus
altis sedent, O.: eburneis sellis,
L.: carpento, L.: delphine, O.: columbae viridi
solo, V. —Of magistrates, esp. of judges,
to sit, occupy an official seat, preside, be a judge, hold court, act as
juror
: (tribuno) in Rostris sedente: si idcirco sedetis,
ut, etc.: sedissem forsitan unus De centum index in tua verba viris,
O.: iudex sedit simius, Ph.: in tribunali Pompei praetoris
urbani,
assist
—
To continue sitting, sit still, continue, remain, tarry, wait, abide, sit idle,
be inactive, delay, linger, loiter
: isdem consulibus sedentibus lata lex est, etc.:
an sedere oportuit Domi, T.: totos dies in
villā: sedemus desides domi, L.: tam diu uno loco, N.: Sedit qui timuit, ne
non succederet,
stayed at home
, H.: meliora deos sedet omina poscens,
waits
, V.: ante sacras fores, Tb.: ad mea busta sedens,
Pr.—Prov.: compressis manibus sedere,
sit with folded hands
, L.—Of troops,
to sit down, remain encamped, be entrenched, keep the field
: ante moenia, L.: ad
Trebiam, L.: sedendo expugnare
urbem, L.: sedend<*>
bellum gerere,
by inactivity
, L.: sedendo supera <*>ri
eum, qui, etc., L.: qui sedet circum castella sub
armis, V.— Fig.,
to sink, settle, subside, rest, lie
: Sederunt medio terra fretumquo solo,
O.: nebula campo quam montibus densior sederet,
was thicker on the plain
, L.: esca, Quae simplex olim tibi
sederit,
sat well upon your stomach
, H.—
To sit, sit close, hold fast, be firm, be fixed, be settled, be established
: tempus fuit, quo navit in undis, Nunc sedet
Ortygie, O.: in liquido sederunt ossa
cerebro,
stuck fast
, O.: clava sedit in ore viri,
stuck fast
, O.: librata cum sederit (glans),
L.: plagam sedere Cedendo arcebat,
from sinking deeply
, O.—In the mind,
to be fixed, be impressed, be determined
: in ingenio Cressa relicta tuo, O.:
Idque pio sedet Aeneae, V.