Well now we've got a problem, because the dictionary seems to acknowledge the common misuse of the term.
Subsonic and supersonic describe only one thing: the speed of an object relative to the speed of sound in a sound-propagating medium. If something is travelling faster than the speed of sound, than it is supersonic. If it is travelling slower than the speed of sound, than it is subsonic.
Whether something is above or below our hearing range is a question of ultrasonic or infrasonic. We've already seen those two defined so we won't go over that again.
Suppose we have an item travelling above the speed of sound but with a frequency of 10 Hz. This is below the common bandwidth of human hearing, but is it subsonic? Not at all.
Amplifiers use the term SSF to denote a high-pass filter. I wonder how you can filter low-frequency content if you have a filter that removes anything travelling below the speed of sound. As you can see, that makes no sense. Instead, your amplifier has an InfraSonic Filter, which does do as described.
It is very much a semantical argument, but it is important to note the difference between the actual meaning of words, and the uninformed marketing that has existed in car audio for a couple decades. We've stopped saying a lot of silly things, but some just keep on going (watts RMS is another good example).