Lewis Short
subscriptĭo (noun F) : subscribo.
* Any thing written underneath, a subscription (class.).
* In gen.: Serapionis subscriptio,Cic. Att. 6, 1, 17.
* A list, register: jugerum subscriptio ac professio,Cic. Verr 2, 3, 47, § 113.
* Jurid. t. t., a subscription to an accusation: si cui crimen obiciatur, praecedere debet in crimen subscriptio, quae res ad id inventa est, ne facile quis prosiliat ad accusationem, cum sciat inultam sibi non futuram,Dig. 48, 2, 7: componere,Sen. Ben. 3, 26, 2: consecratur subscriptio,id. Cons. ad Marc. 22, 5: edere,id. Lud. Mort. Claud. 14, 1; id. Apoc. 14, 1; Gell. 2, 4, 1: tanti sceleris,Quint. Decl. 15, 6.—Also of a joint subscription, by one who seconds the accusation (cf. subscribo, I. B. 1.): subscriptionem sibi postularunt,Cic. Div. in Caecil. 15, 49.
* Publicists' t. t., of the censor, a noting down, note of the offence censured: subscriptio censoria,Cic. Clu. 44, 123: censoriae,id. ib. 44, 123; cf. id. ib. 42, 118.
* A signature of a document (consisting of the subscription of one's name or the appending of a formula of greeting; v. subscribo, I. B. 3.): si testator specialiter subscriptione suā declaraverit, dictasse, etc.,Dig. 48, 10, 15: quodcumque imperator per epistolam et subscriptionem statuit, legem esse constat,ib. 1, 4, 1: cum Rhodiorum magistratus, quod litteras publicas sine subscriptione ad se dederant, evocasset, etc.,Suet. Tib. 32 Wolf (cf. Dio, 57, 11).
* Hence, a warrant of the emperor (late Lat.), Amm. 15, 7, 9.—*
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary