Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • Same as subsultive.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • adjective rare Bounding; leaping; moving by sudden leaps or starts.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Bounding; leaping; moving by sudden leaps or starts.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Latin subsultim ("with leaps"), from subsilire ("to spring up"), from sub ("under") + salire ("to leap")

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Examples

  • Thus, in the province of P. Maurizio alone, the shock was described as subsultory first and then undulatory or vorticose at 25 places, undulatory and then subsultory at 22, undulatory and then subsultory and again undulatory or vorticose at 13, and subsultory first, then undulatory, and finally subsultory and vorticose at two places.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • Bute, who tells his constituents at Bute, that the true secret of the apparent incoherency in the conduct of Government, of that subsultory movement from almost passive _surveillance_ to the most intense development of power, is to be found in some error, some lapse as yet unknown, on the part of the conspirators.

    Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 54, No. 337, November, 1843 Various

  • In the second zone (Fig. 19), the same two phases were universally observed, but the subsultory movement was less pronounced or the movement was partly subsultory and partly undulatory, and occasionally both phases are described as undulatory.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • At Diano Marina, as will be seen from the curve _b_, the shock again consisted of two phases, each beginning with a few subsultory vibrations and ending with horizontal undulations of much longer period.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • Serrara, where the shock was subsultory and accompanied by noise; and less strong, though still subsultory, at Ciglio, Panza, Forio,

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • We have seen that, in the three earthquakes of 1828, 1881, and 1883, there is distinct evidence of a second meizoseismal area at Fontana, within which the shock was mainly subsultory.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • An _undulatory_ shock consists of one or several waves, the movement to and fro being along a nearly horizontal line; a _subsultory_ shock of movements in a nearly vertical direction; while a _vorticose_ shock consists of undulatory or subsultory movements crossing one another in different directions.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • At Polla, for instance, which lies close to the north-west epicentre, the first warning was given by a rushing sound; almost instantly, and while it was yet heard, came a strong subsultory or up-and-down movement, succeeded after a few seconds, but without any interval, by an undulatory motion.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • Zafarraya, a loud sound like thunder was first heard, and before it ceased there came a violent subsultory movement preceded by a very brief oscillation, then a pause of one or two seconds, and lastly a more intense and longer series of undulations, the whole movement lasting 12 seconds.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

  • Occasionally, the likeness was still closer, in the succession of sound, subsultory motion and concluding horizontal undulations.

    A Study of Recent Earthquakes Charles Davison 1899

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