Lewis Short
ag-glūtĭno (adg-), āvi, ātum, 1
* V.a., to glue, paste, solder, or cement to a thing, to fit closely to, to fasten to.
* Lit.: tu illud (prooemium) desecabis, hoc adglutinabis, you may remove that introduction, and add this instead of it, * Cic. Att. 16, 6: aliquid fronti,Cels. 6, 6, n. 1; so id. 7, 26, n. 4; Vitr. 10, 13, 245: adglutinando auro,Plin. 33, 5, 29, § 93: Fragmenta teporata adglutinantur,id. 36, 26, 67, § 199: adglutinabo pisces fiuminum tuorum squamis tuis,Vulg. Ezech. 29, 4.
* Fig.: ita mihi ad malum malae res plurimae se adglutinant,Plaut. Aul. 4, 10, 71; id. Men. 2, 2, 67: adglutinavi mihi omnem domum Israël,Vulg. Jer. 13, 11.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary