Lewis Short
(verb) : con-disco, dĭdĭci, 3, *
* To learn with or in company with one: ex his, qui mihi Athenis condidicere,App. Flor. 3, n. 18, p. 362, 8.
* To learn carefully, eagerly, or well, to learn thoroughly (rare but class. in prose and poetry).
* With acc.: modos,Hor. C. 4, 11, 34: crimen a teneris annis,Ov. H. 4, 25: genera plausuum, *Suet. Ner. 20: pacem oculis,Sil. 7, 462.—Far more freq.
* With inf.: ego istuc aliis dare condidici,Plaut. Ps. 4, 1, 34: merum bibere,id. Curc. 1, 3, 4; 4, 3, 2; id. Poen. 3, 1, 11: mihi paulo diligentius supplicare,Cic. Planc. 5, 13; * Quint. 1, 9, 2: foris pasci,Col. 7, 3, 19: pauperiem pati,Hor. C. 3, 2, 3.—*
* Transf., of inanim. subjects: ut (flagellum) paulatim condiscat suis radicibus ali,Col. 4, 15, 3; so id. 3, 10, 16; Plin. 21, 5, 11, § 24.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary