subceed
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Verb
[edit]subceed (third-person singular simple present subceeds, present participle subceeding, simple past and past participle subceeded)
- (transitive) To be less than.
- 1956 March, Tom Denny, “Rebuilt”, in Flying Magazine, volume 58, number 3, page 56:
- The absolute minimum or “never subceed speed” as referred to by pilot-writer J . R. Hoyt (see Feb. '54 issue of FLYING, “How Fast to Glide”) can be figured by using 20 per cent.
- 1969, National Tax Journal - Volumes 22-23, page 331:
- Only the industrial, commercial, and residential tax colonies subceed this rate.
- 2002, Proceedings of the 2002 Congress on Evolutionary Computation - Volume 2, page 1554:
- At any point during the trip, the Stack Count for the visited leaves and non-terminal vertices cannot subceed 1.