Lewis Short
(adjective) : bĭvĭus, a, um, bis-via
* Having two ways or passages (rare; not in Cic.): fauces,Verg. A. 11, 516.—So, calles, Val. Fl. 5, 395: di, deae, worshipped at cross-roads, Inscr. Orell. 2105.—Hence, substt.
* Bĭvĭi (sc. di), Inscr. Orell. 389; 2104.
* Bĭvĭum, i, n., a place with two ways, or where two ways meet.
* Lit.: in bivio portae,Verg. A. 9, 238: ad bivia consistere,Liv. 38, 45, 8; Plin. 6, 28, 32, § 144; Vulg. Marc. 11, 4.
* Trop.: bivium nobis ad culturam dedit natura, experientiam et imitationem, a twofold means or method, Varr. R. R. 1, 18, 7.—Of a twofold love, Ov. R. Am. 486.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary