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n. [L. sub, under; sumere, to take]To include under; to put under another as belonging to it, i.e., in zoological classification.
Online Dictionary of Invertebrate Zoology. A.R. Maggenti and S.L. Gardne. 2005.
Online Dictionary of Invertebrate Zoology. A.R. Maggenti and S.L. Gardne. 2005.
Subsume — Sub*sume , v. t. [Pref. sub + L. sumere to take.] To take up into or under, as individual under species, species under genus, or particular under universal; to place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include under something … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
subsume — index classify, comprise, encompass (include), include, pigeonhole Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
subsume — 1530s, from Mod.L. subsumere to take under, from L. sub under (see SUB (Cf. sub )) + sumere to take (see EXEMPT (Cf. exempt)). Related: Subsumed; subsuming … Etymology dictionary
subsume — *include, comprehend, embrace, involve, imply … New Dictionary of Synonyms
subsume — ► VERB ▪ include or absorb in something else. DERIVATIVES subsumable adjective. ORIGIN Latin subsumere, from sumere take … English terms dictionary
subsume — [səb so͞om′, subsyo͞om′] vt. subsumed, subsuming [ModL subsumere < L sub , under + sumere, to take: see CONSUME] 1. to include within a larger class, group, order, etc. 2. to show (an idea, instance, etc.) to be covered by a rule, principle,… … English World dictionary
subsume — v. (formal) (d; tr.) ( to classify ) to subsume under (to subsume an item under a more inclusive category) * * * [səb sjuːm] (formal) (d; tr.) ( to classify ) to subsume under (to subsume an item under a more inclusive category) … Combinatory dictionary
subsume — UK [səbˈsjuːm] / US [səbˈsum] verb [transitive, often passive] Word forms subsume : present tense I/you/we/they subsume he/she/it subsumes present participle subsuming past tense subsumed past participle subsumed formal to include something in a… … English dictionary
subsume — sub|sume [səbˈsju:m US ˈsu:m] v [T] [Date: 1500 1600; : Modern Latin; Origin: subsumere, from Latin sumere to take up ] formal to include someone or something as a member of a group or type, rather than considering it separately subsume sb/sth… … Dictionary of contemporary English
subsume — verb (T) formal to include someone or something as a member of a group or type, rather than considering it separately: subsume sb/sth under sth: For the purpose of the survey, typists are subsumed under office workers … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
subsume — transitive verb (subsumed; subsuming) Etymology: New Latin subsumere, from Latin sub + sumere to take up more at consume Date: 1825 to include or place within something larger or more comprehensive ; encompass as a subordinate or component… … New Collegiate Dictionary