Citations:subaudite


 * 1852, Theophylact [pseud.], “Marriage of Ecclesiastics” in Notes and Queries IV:cix, page 428
 * That sole remaining sense is, “the bed (let it) be undefiled;” subaudite ἔστω in the verse is, “Let marriage be honourable in all” (men or things), “and the bed be undefiled; but (or for) whoremongers and adulterers God will judge.”
 * 1861, Isaac Taylor, The Spirit of the Hebrew Poetry, page 54
 * We ought not to say that a scorn of popular favour betrays itself — as if subaudite — in these deliverances of a message from the Almighty; yet it is almost so.
 * 1905, The Spectator XCIV, page 355
 * In this proclamation the Czar denounced the revolutionaries as men “blinded by pride,” called upon his people to rally round the Throne “under the banner of the autocratic might of the Czar,” and expressed his intention to go on fighting for the honour of Russia, “and the command of the waters of the Pacific Ocean, so urgently necessary for the consolidation of the peaceful prosperity not only of Russia, but of other Christian nations” (? subaudite Germany).
 * 1907, Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, page 5
 * By the ‘watchers’ are intended subaudité the guardians of the composer, the Princess Nukada, a concubine of the Mikado Temmu.
 * 1908, Journal of Theological Studies (Clarendon Press) IX, page 619
 * His aim is to give to the ordinary English reader, who has a reasonable interest in ‘Literature and Life’ — to which in Scotland ‘Philosophy’ is a subaudite third term, always implied and quickly felt — an account of Stoicism, which shall be neither popular in the sense of being a mere string of generalities, nor technical, but a fair and sympathetic treatment, that will enable any thoughtful person to enter into the feelings and conceptions from which the Stoics worked, and to follow them up to the goal which the Stoics reached, and thus to know Stoicism from within.