Lewis Short
(verb) : trans-vĕho or trāvĕho, xi, ctum, 3
* To carry, conduct, or convey across or over; to transport (syn.: transporto, transmitto).
* Lit.
* In gen.: quid militum transvexisset,Caes. B. C. 3, 29: exercitum in Britanniam,Suet. Caes. 58; cf.: copias ponte,Plin. 4, 12, 24, § 76: ut jam Hispanos omnes inflati transvexerint utres,Liv. 21, 47, 5: Dardanium agmen (pons),Sil. 4, 489: agmina classe,id. 4, 494: corpus defuncti per vicos,Dig. 47, 13, 3; Sen. Herc. Oet. 1964: navem Argo umeris transvectam Alpes,Plin. 3, 18, 22, § 128.
* Trop., of time, to pass by, elapse (Tacitean): abiit jam et transvectum est tempus, quo, etc.,Tac. H. 2, 76: transvecta aestas,id. Agr. 18.
* In partic.
* To carry, bear, lead, or conduct along in triumph: signa tabulasque,Flor. 2, 12: arma spoliaque multa Gallica carpentis transvecta,Liv. 39, 7, 2.
* Of the Roman knights, to ride past before the censor for review (syn. traduco), Liv. 9, 46, 15; Suet. Aug. 38; Dig. 2, 4, 2, § 4; Val. Max. 2, 2, 8.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary