Lewis Short
(verb) : com-plĭco (conp-), āvi, ātum (postAug. ui, ĭtum; cf.: applico, explico, etc.), 1
* To fold together, to fold up (rare but class.).
* Prop.: rudentem,Plaut. Rud. 4, 3, 1: armamenta,id. Merc. 1, 2, 83: epistulam,Cic. Q. Fr. 3, 1, 5, § 17; id. Att. 12, 1, 2: Diogenes se complicuit in dolio,Sen. Ep. 90, 11: pedibus complicitis,App. M. 9, p. 236; cf.: complicitus in genua,id. ib. 1, p. 111, 3. —*
* Trop.: si quis voluerit animi sui complicatam notionem evolvere (the figure borrowed from the folding together of books, letters, etc.),Cic. Off. 3, 19, 76.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary