sub‧scribe /səbˈskraɪb/
verb[
Date: 1400-1500;
Language: Latin;
Origin: subscribere, from scribere 'to write']
1. [intransitive] to pay money, usually once a year, to have copies of a newspaper or magazine sent to you, or to have some other service
subscribe to You can subscribe to the magazine for as little as $32 a year.2. [intransitive] British English to pay money regularly to be a member of an organization or to help its work
subscribe to She subscribes to an environmental action group.3. [intransitive] to agree to buy or pay for
sharessubscribe for Each employee may subscribe for up to £2,000 worth of shares.subscribe to something phrasal verb formal if you subscribe to an idea, you agree with it or support it
subscribe to the view/belief/theory etc I have never subscribed to the view that schooldays are the happiest days of your life. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲