Definition of "subvention"
subvention
noun
countable and uncountable, plural subventions
A subsidy; provision of financial or other support.
Quotations
[…] the said religious shall […] pay all papal impositions, subventions, and contributions […]
1758, John Burton, Monasticon Eboracense and the Ecclesiastical History of Yorkshire, York, page 230
Inside its skirts he carried his shopping for Miss Dubber: the bacon from Mr. Aitken, only mind and tell him he's to cut it on number five, give him half a chance he'll make it thicker. And tell that Mr. Crosse three of his tomatoes were rotten last week, not just bad, rotten. If I don't have replacements I'll never go to him again. Pym had followed her instructions to the letter, though not with the ferocity she would have wished, for both Crosse and Aitken were recipients of his secret subventions, and for years had been sending Miss Dubber bills for only half what she had spent.
1986, John le Carré, A Perfect Spy
(obsolete) The act of coming under.
Quotations
Now the only Ascension that we read of, besides these, is that of our blessed Saviour; and the Manner, in which he is said to have been carry’d up, was, by the Subvention of a Cloud, which rais’d him from the Ground […]
1744, Thomas Stackhouse, A New History of the Holy Bible, London: Stephen Austen, 2nd edition, Volume 2, Book 6, Chapter 2, p. 845
(archaic) The act of relieving, as of a burden; support; aid; assistance; help.
Quotations
[…] if we pray to God to remove a lesser judgement by way of subvention, questionlesse we may beseech him to deliver us from the great evill of a wounded conscience, by way of prevention.
1647, Thomas Fuller, The Cause and Cure of a Wounded Conscience, London: John Williams, Dialogue 21, pages 157–158
A small body of negroes defied the choicest troops of one of the greatest nations in the world, kept an extensive country in alarm, and were at length brought to surrender, only by means of a subvention still more extraordinary than their own mode of warfare.
1803, Robert Charles Dallas, The History of the Maroons, London: Longman and Rees, Volume 1, Letter 5, p. 123
Let the young critics, who seek a cheap reputation for austerity, by cavilling at “incidental music,” set their faces rather against the attempt to justify inferior dramatic art by the subvention of a quite alien art like painting, of any art, indeed, whose sphere is only surface.
1894, Max Beerbohm, A Defence of Cosmetics, New York: Dodd, Mead, published 1922, page 12
verb
third-person singular simple present subventions, present participle subventioning, simple past and past participle subventioned