sufficiō fēcī, fectus, ere
sub+facio,
to put under, lay a foundation for
: opus, Cu.—
To dip, dye, impregnate, tinge
: lanam medicamentis: (angues) Ardentes oculos suffecti
sanguine,
suffused
, V.—Of public officers,
to appoint to a vacancy, choose as a substitute
: suffectus in Lucreti locum Horatius,
L.: in demortui locum censor sufficitur,
L.: (apes) regem parvosque Quirites Sufficiunt,
V.: quibus vitio creatis suffecti,
L.: Sperante heredem suffici se proximum, Ph.: Atque aliam
ex aliā generando suffice prolem, i. e.
let one generation succeed another
, V.—
To give, yield, afford, supply
: tellus Sufficit umorem, V.: eos excursionibus sufficiendo, i. e.
by employing them in sallies
, L.: Danais animos,
to give courage and strength
, V.: contra virīs,
V.—Intrans,
to be sufficient, suffice, avail, be adequate, satisfy
: nec scribae sufficere nec tabulae nomina illorum capere
potuerunt: Nec iam sufficiunt, V.: oppidani
non sufficiebant, L.: nec iam vires
sufficere cuiusquam, Cs.: mons hominum
abunde sufficiebat alimentis, L.: hae
manūs suffecere desiderio meo, Cu.: nec sufficit umbo Ictibus, V.: terra ingenito umore egens vix ad perennīs suffecit
amnīs, L.: ad omnia tuenda,
L.: non suffecturum ducem unum adversus quattuor
populos, L.: Nec locus in tumulos
sufficit, O.: Nec nos obniti contra nec tendere
tantum Sufficimus, V.