Remeo, rémeas pe. cor. remeâre. Plaut.To returne or go backe againe.Gaudia non remeant, sed fugitiua volant. Mart. Ne ad se remearent.Liu.Quum ex Italia trans mare remeant. Varro. Res in se remeantes. Sen. Vrbem remeare.Virg.Remeat aer.Cic.Returneth.Aquæ remeant. Plin. Certis pestifer calor remeat horis aut rigor. Plin. Dies remeat. Tibull.
Remus, The brother of Romulus by whome he was put to death, fo that in scorne he leaped oner the walles of % newe builded citie: And so began Rome with bloudshed & heynous nuirder by him committed, that was the first Founder of the citie. After the death of Remus, the citie was (in punishment therof) sore veced with a grcenous plague: and Apollo being asked how it might be stayde, did giue annswere, that the ghost of Remus must by some solemne cere, monie be pacified. Wherefore Romulas deuised, that, whÊsoener he did sit in royall Throne to make any lawe or ordinaunce, there should be set by him an other chayre of estare, with a Scepter, Oiademe, and other coyall ensignes in it, that his brother being deade, mighte seeme in a sorte to reigne with him, whome being aliue bee woulde not abide to bee partaker of his kingdome: and so with a shadow would seeme to satisfie that, which in deede hee coulde not suffer.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
rĕ-mĕo, āvi, 1, v. n., to go or come back, to turn back, return (not freq. till after the Aug. period; only once in Cic.; in Cæs. not at all; syn.: redeo, regredior). I.Lit.: remeabo intro, Plaut. Ep. 5, 1, 55: remeato audacter, id. As. 1, 3, 75: in ludum, Afr. ap. Fest. s. h. v. p. 277 Müll. (Com. Rel. p. 151 Rib.): in patriam, Ov. M. 15, 480: patrias in sedes, Tac. A. 14, 25 fin.: rursum in terga (with cedere), id. ib. 3, 21: ad se (legati), Liv. 9, 16: ex Campaniā, Tac. A. 15, 60; cf. Aegypto, id. ib. 2, 69: eodem remeante nuntio, Liv. 9, 3: navibus remeabat disjecto agmine, Tac. H. 5, 22; cf. Suet. Vit. Plin. fin.: (coturnices) cum ex Italiā trans mare remeant, Varr. R. R. 3, 5, 8: greges nocte remeabant ad stabula, Liv. 24, 3, 5; Pall. 1, 39, 1. —(b).Poet. and late Lat. with acc.: patrias remeabo inglorius urbes, Verg. A. 11, 793: Euboicos penates, Stat. S. 3, 5, 12: destinatas remeārunt sedes, Amm. 17, 13, 34: castra, App. M. 7 pr.—b. Of inanimate subjects: cum umore consumpto neque terra ali posset neque remearet aër, would flow back again, Cic. N. D. 2, 46, 118: (naves) mari remeabant, Tac. A. 12, 17 fin.: remeante flumine,
receding
, id. H. 1, 86 fin.: bis adfluunt bisque remeant (aquae), Plin. 2, 97, 99, 212.— B. In partic., to come back as a victor, return home in triumph (poet.; cf. Cort. ad Luc. 7, 256; Burm. ad Val. Fl. 4, 589): victor ad Argos, Verg. A. 2, 95; cf.: victor domito ab hoste, Ov. M. 15, 569: Scythicis Crassus victor ab oris, Luc. 2, 553: nunc neque te longi remeantem pompa triumphi Excipit, id. 1, 286: triumpho, Stat. Th. 12, 164.—With acc.: vetitos remeare triumphos, to return home to the triumph denied (me), Luc. 7, 256.— II.Trop., to come back, return: transiit aetas, Quam cito, non segnis stat remeatque dies, Tib. 1, 4, 28.—With acc.: si natura juberet A certis annis aevom remeare peractum, Hor. S. 1, 6, 94.—In discourse: ad ordinem remeabo coeptorum, Amm. 22, 16, 24 al.?*! Lengthened collat. form remānant = remeant (like dănunt = dant, prodīnunt = prodeunt, redīnunt = redeunt): rivos camposque remanant, Enn. Fragm. ap. Fest. p. 282 Müll. (Ann. v. 72 Vahl.).