I.from that place, thence.
I. Lit.: “jube illos illinc abscedere,” Plaut. Most. 2, 2, 36: “illinc venire,” id. Men. 2, 3, 61: “se illinc subducet,” Ter. Eun. 4, 1, 14: “illinc huc transferetur virgo,” id. Ad. 4, 7, 13: “illinc pallium mihi huc ferte,” Plaut. Merc. 5, 2, 70: “illinc equidem Gnaeum profectum puto,” Cic. Att. 9, 14, 2: “imperator utrimque hinc et illinc Jovi Vota suscipere,” here and there, Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 74; cf.: “et hinc et illinc,” id. Most. 3, 1, 38. —
II. Transf., from that person or thing, from that quarter, from or on that side: habeo pro meis, nec manu adseruntur; “neque illinc partem quisquam postulat,” Plaut. Rud. 4, 3, 33: “si illinc beneficium non sit, rectius putem quidvis domi perpeti,” Cic. Att. 9, 7, 4: illinc omnes praestigiae; “illinc omnes fallaciae: omnia denique ab his mimorum argumenta nata sunt,” id. Rab. Post. 12, 35; “so opp. hinc: illinc cornicines, hinc praecedentia longi agminis officia,” on one side ... on the other, Juv. 10, 44.