v. Obs. rare1. [ad. L. accumb-ĕre to lay oneself down, esp. at table, f. ac- = ad- to + -cumbere to stoop, lie down.] To recline at meals, like the Greeks and later Romans.

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1646.  Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., 241. Now of their accumbing places, the one was called Stibadion and Sigma, carrying the figure of an halfe Moone, and of an uncertaine capacity.

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