Lewis Short
dissulto, āre
* V. freq. n. [dissilio], to leap apart, to fly in pieces, burst asunder (poet., and in post-Aug. prose): dissultant ripae,Verg. A. 8, 240: tanti crepitus,id. ib. 12, 923: ferrum utrimque,Plin. 37, 4, 15, § 57: Vulcanius ardor,Sil. 9, 607: aquae splendor, darts here and there with tremulous motion, cf. id. 7, 143.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary