[L. = it is understood, 3rd pers. sing. pres. ind. pass. of subaudīre to SUBAUD.] = prec. 2. Phr. In a subauditur: by implication.
1803. Beddoes, Hygëia, XI. 95. It will not pass like a subauditur in grammar.
1880. Contemp. Rev., Feb., 256. Our fiction is as much occupied, though in a subauditur, with the skeleton in the cupboard of daily life as [etc.].
1885. J. Martineau, Types Eth. Th., I. I. ii. (1886), 313. You cannot tack on the word modes immediately to substance without a subauditur of attribute.