subjacent |
located or occurring below or underneath; underlying. [2 definitions] |
subject |
the topic of what is said, written, studied, or the like. [14 definitions] |
subjective |
formed or existing in a person's mind rather than in the world outside. [3 definitions] |
subjectivism |
the quality or condition of being subjective. [2 definitions] |
subjectless |
combined form of subject. |
subject matter |
the core or substance of that which is being examined or discussed. |
subjoin |
to join to the end of (something spoken or written); append. |
sub judice |
(Latin) under consideration by a judge or court; awaiting judicial decision. |
subjugate |
to win mastery over, as by military conquest; subdue; vanquish. [2 definitions] |
subjunctive |
in grammar, denoting or pertaining to the mood of a verb that marks a statement or question as hypothetical, doubtful, or grammatically subordinate, such as "were" in "if I were you". [2 definitions] |
subkingdom |
in taxonomy, a category indicating a primary subdivision of a plant or animal kingdom. |
sublanguage |
combined form of language. |
sublease |
a lease of a whole or part of a property, such as an apartment, that is granted by a person who is the lessee of that property. [2 definitions] |
sublet |
to rent (one's property held by lease) to another. [3 definitions] |
sublevel |
combined form of level. |
sublibrarian |
combined form of librarian. |
sublicense |
combined form of license. |
sublieutenant |
in the British navy and certain other armed forces, an officer ranking immediately below a lieutenant, or the rank of such an officer. |
sublimate |
to divert the expression of (a crude impulse or desire, often sexual) into a socially acceptable or more ideal form. [4 definitions] |
sublime |
exalted or noble; lofty. [5 definitions] |
subliminal |
being, pertaining to, or using stimuli below the threshold of conscious perception. |