Sublate — Sub late, v. t. [From sublatus, used as p. p. of tollere to take away. See {Tolerate}.] To take or carry away; to remove. [R.] E. Hall. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sublate — [səb lāt′] vt. sublated, sublating 〚< L sublatus (suppletive pp. of tollere, to lift up, take away, annul) < sub , up (see SUB ) + latus, suppletive pp. of ferre, to BEAR1〛 … Universalium
sublate — [səb lāt′] vt. sublated, sublating [< L sublatus (suppletive pp. of tollere, to lift up, take away, annul) < sub , up (see SUB ) + latus, suppletive pp. of ferre, to BEAR1] Logic to deny, contradict, or negate … English World dictionary
sublate — verb To negate, deny or contradict … Wiktionary
sublate — [sə bleɪt] verb Philosophy assimilate (a smaller entity) into a larger one. Derivatives sublation noun Origin C19 (earlier (C16) as sublation): from L. sublat taken away , from sub from below + lat (from the stem of tollere take away ) … English new terms dictionary
sublate — sub·late … English syllables
sublate — /sʌbˈleɪt/ (say sub layt) verb (t) (sublated, sublating) (in Hegelian philosophy) to set aside but not wholly to dispense with; supersede while retaining something of the nature of what is superseded. {Latin sub sub + latus, past participle,… …
sublate — v.t. deny; cancel; reduce, especially an idea to subordinate part of a greater unity. ♦ sublation, n. ♦ sublative, a. tending to remove … Dictionary of difficult words
sublate — ˌsəˈblāt transitive verb ( ed/ ing/ s) Etymology: Latin sublatus (suppletive past participle of tollere to take away, lift up), from sub up + latus carried, suppletive past participle of ferre to carry more at sub , tolerate … Useful english dictionary
Aufheben — is a German word with several seemingly contradictory meanings, including to lift up, to abolish, or to sublate. [http://dict.leo.org/ende?lp=ende lang=de searchLoc=0 cmpType=relaxed sectHdr=on spellToler=on search=aufheben relink=on] In… … Wikipedia