Lewis Short
(verb) : rĕ-mĕo, āvi, 1
* To go or come back, to turn back, return (not freq. till after the Aug. period; only once in Cic.; in Caes. not at all; syn.: redeo, regredior).
* Lit.: remeabo intro,Plaut. Ep. 5, 1, 55: remeato audacter,id. As. 1, 3, 75: in ludum, Afr. ap. Fest. s. h. v. p. 277 Müll. (Com. Rel. p. 151 Rib.): in patriam,Ov. M. 15, 480: patrias in sedes,Tac. A. 14, 25 fin.: rursum in terga (with cedere),id. ib. 3, 21: ad se (legati),Liv. 9, 16: ex Campaniā,Tac. A. 15, 60; cf. Aegypto,id. ib. 2, 69: eodem remeante nuntio,Liv. 9, 3: navibus remeabat disjecto agmine,Tac. H. 5, 22; cf. Suet. Vit. Plin. fin.: (coturnices) cum ex Italiā trans mare remeant,Varr. R. R. 3, 5, 8: greges nocte remeabant ad stabula,Liv. 24, 3, 5; Pall. 1, 39, 1.
* Poet. and late Lat. with acc.: patrias remeabo inglorius urbes,Verg. A. 11, 793: Euboicos penates,Stat. S. 3, 5, 12: destinatas remeārunt sedes,Amm. 17, 13, 34: castra,App. M. 7 pr.
* Trop., to come back, return: transiit aetas, Quam cito, non segnis stat remeatque dies,Tib. 1, 4, 28.—With acc.: si natura juberet A certis annis aevom remeare peractum,Hor. S. 1, 6, 94.—In discourse: ad ordinem remeabo coeptorum,Amm. 22, 16, 24 al.?*! Lengthened collat. form remānant = remeant (like dănunt = dant, prodīnunt = prodeunt, redīnunt = redeunt): rivos camposque remanant, Enn. Fragm. ap. Fest. p. 282 Müll. (Ann. v. 72 Vahl.).
* In partic., to come back as a victor, return home in triumph (poet.; cf. Cort. ad Luc. 7, 256; Burm. ad Val. Fl. 4, 589): victor ad Argos,Verg. A. 2, 95; cf.: victor domito ab hoste,Ov. M. 15, 569: Scythicis Crassus victor ab oris,Luc. 2, 553: nunc neque te longi remeantem pompa triumphi Excipit,id. 1, 286: triumpho,Stat. Th. 12, 164.—With acc.: vetitos remeare triumphos, to return home to the triumph denied (me), Luc. 7, 256.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary