(subj pluperf. summōsses, H.),
mōtus, ēre, to put out of the way, drive back, drive off, send away,
remove: hostīs ex mūro, Cs.: statione hostium lembos, L.: submotā contione, dismissed: submotis velut
in aliam insulam hostibus, Ta.: Maris litora,
i. e. remove (by moles), H.: Hic spelunca fuit vasto submota
recessu, i. e. hidden, V.: Silva summovet
ignīs, i. e. keeps off, O.—Of a crowd, to clear away,
remove, make room: turbam, L.: summoto
populo, L.: lictor apparuit, summoto
incesserunt, after room had been made, L.: summoto
aditus, access after the lictors had made room, L.—Poet.: neque
Summovet lictor miseros tumultūs Mentis, H.— Fig., to put away,
keep, withdraw, withhold, remove: a bello Antiochum et Ptolemaeum
reges, i. e. induce to abandon, L.: magnitudine poenae
a maleficio summoveri: summotus pudor, H.—To banish: ad Histrum, O.: patriā,
O.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.