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Excedere

Excedere is a Latin verb of the third conjugation meaning to go out, depart, withdraw, or to surpass and exceed. It combines ex- “out” with cedo “to go, yield,” and its principal parts are excedo, excedere, excessi, excessum. The verb is primarily intransitive in its sense of movement, but in figurative uses it can mean to surpass or exceed a limit or standard.

In usage, excedere commonly denotes leaving a place or withdrawing from a position (for example, to depart

Morphologically, excedere forms like excedo, excedes, excedit in the present indicative; imperfect like excedebam, perfect as

See also: exire, exitus, exodus, cedo. Excedere illustrates how Latin verbs of motion can broaden to figurative

from
a
camp
or
city).
In
a
figurative
sense
it
means
to
go
beyond
a
limit,
to
surpass,
outrun,
or
exceed
expectations
or
measurements.
The
sense
can
be
expressed
with
various
complements
or
constructions,
depending
on
what
is
being
surpassed.
excessi,
and
supine
as
excessum.
The
perfect
passive
participle
is
excessus,
and
the
present
participle
is
excedens.
Passive
forms
such
as
excedor,
excederis,
exceditur
exist
in
Latin
as
well.
The
related
noun
exodus
or
exitus
derives
from
the
same
root
and
denotes
an
exit
or
departure;
the
adjective
excedens
means
surpassing
or
exceeding.
meaning,
linking
physical
departure
with
the
idea
of
going
beyond
a
boundary.