Succresco, succrescis, succréui, succrêtum, pen. prod. succréscere. Colum. To grow vnder or low: to increase & ware more and more.Succrescere ætati alicuius.Cic.To grow after one.Vestræ quasi succrescit ætari. Ci. It doth increase with your age as it were.Succrescere gloriæ seniôrum.Liu.To attaine to the glory of the elders.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
suc-cresco (subc-), ĕre, v. inch. n., to grow under or from under any thing; to grow up (very rare). I.Lit.: sub ordine naturali pilorum (in palpebris) alius ordo succrescit, Cels. 7, 7, 8: succrescit ab imo, Ov. M. 9, 352: ne patiantur herbam succrescere, Col. 4, 14, 2; cf.: mores mali, Quasi herba irrigua, succrevere uberrime, Plaut. Trin. 1, 1, 9.—B.Transf., to grow up to any thing: toties haustum cratera repleri Sponte suā, per seque vident succrescere vina, to spring up, or be supplied anew, Ov. M. 8, 680.—II.Trop.: non enim ille mediocris orator vestrae quasi succrescit aetati, grows up after, succeeds, Cic. de Or. 3, 61, 230: se gloriae seniorum succrevisse, Liv. 10, 13, 17.