LAT

Lewis Short

(verb) : ex-trūdo, si, sum, 3
* To thrust out or forth, to drive out, drive away (class.; syn. eicio).
* Lit.: me ex aedibus,Plaut. Aul. 1, 1, 5; for which: me aedibus,id. ib. 31: me foras,id. Truc. 1, 1, 68; Ter. Eun. 4, 5, 11: a latebris suis extrusi hostes,Tac. Agr. 33: te in viam, simulac perpaululum gustaris, extrudam et eiciam,will drive out,Cic. de Or. 2, 58, 234; cf. id. Fam. 14, 6; id. Att. 16, 2, 4: is tamquam extruderetur a senatu in Macedoniam,id. Phil. 10, 5, 10. —Absol.: illam extrudet cum hanc ducet domum,Plaut. Cist. 2, 1, 63.
* Transf., with inanimate objects: (ventus) extrudit saxa,Lucr. 6, 692: extruso mari aggere ac molibus, kept out, * Caes. B. G. 3, 12, 3: Euboea ad meridiem promontorium Geraeston et Capharea extrudit,sends out, shoots out,Mel. 2, 7, 9: merces,to put off, to sell,Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 11.—*
* Trop., to crowd out: rerum novitate extrusa vetustas,Lucr. 3, 964.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

TLL

s. TLL
Thesaurus Linguae Latinae
memory