LAT

Lewis Short

(verb) : al-lūdo (adl-), ūsi, ūsum, 3, and n.
* To play or sport with any thing, to joke, jest, to do a thing sportively; with ad or dat. (most freq. after the Aug. per.; never in Plaut.; and in Ter. and in Cic. only once), * Ter. Eun. 3, 1, 34: Galba autem adludens (discoursing in jests) varie et copiose multas similitudines adferre, Cic. de Or. 1, 56, 240: occupato,Phaedr. 3, 19 fin.; Ov. M. 2, 864: nec plura adludens,Verg. A. 7, 117: Cicero Trebatio adludens,jesting with,Quint. 3, 11, 18 Spald., Halm; so Suet. Caes. 22 al.
* Trop., of the motion
* Of the waves, to sport with, to play against, dash upon: mare terram appetens litoribus adludit,Cic. N. D. 2, 39, 100: solebat Aquilius, quid esset litus, ita definire, quā fluctus adluderet (B. and K. read eluderet; v. eludo), id. Top. 7, 32; cf. Quint. 5, 14, 34: in adludentibus undis,Ov. M. 4, 342.—With acc.: omnia, quae ... fluctus salis adludebant,Cat. 64, 66.
* Of the wind, to play with: summa cacumina silvae lenibus adludit flabris levis Auster,Val. Fl. 6, 664: tremens Adludit patulis arbor hiatibus,Sen. Thyest. 157.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

TLL

s. TLL
Thesaurus Linguae Latinae
memory