Lewis & Short

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The word sublices could not be parsed. Trying a normal dictionary lookup:

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sublĭca, ae, f., a stake or pile driven into the ground, a palisade (cf.: palus, sudes, stipes), Caes. B. C. 3, 49; Liv. 23, 37; Vitr. 3, 3.
Esp., of the piles for a bridge, Caes. B. G. 4, 17; 7, 35; Liv. 1, 37.
In the form sublices, Sall. H. Fragm. 4, 77; cf. Gloss. Labb.

sublĭcĭus, a, um, adj. [sublica], consisting of or resting upon piles: Pons Sublicius, the pile-bridge, a wooden bridge across the Tiber, built by Ancus Marcius, Liv. 1, 33; 2, 10; Sen. Vit. Beat. 25, 1; Plin. 36, 15, 23, § 100; Tac. H. 1, 86; Varr. L. L. 5, § 83, and 6, § 44 Müll.; Fest. p. 293 ib.; cf. Becker, Antiq. 1, p. 693 sq.
As the place where beggars sat, Sen. Vit. Beat. 25.