Lewis Short
follĭcŭlus (noun M) : dim.follis
* A small bag or sack.
* Lit.
* In gen.: folliculis frumentum vehere,Liv. 9, 13, 9: quidam judicatus est parentem occidisse: ei statim ... os obvolutum est folliculo et praeligatum,Cic. Inv. 2, 50, 149.—Of a matricide: statim folliculo lupino os obvolutum est,Auct. Her. 1, 13, 23.
* Transf.
* In gen., a husk, pod, shell, skin, follicle: latentem frugem ruptis velamentis suis, quae folliculos agricolae vocant, adaperire,Sen. Q. N. 5, 18, 3: gluma est grani folliculus,Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 1: cum spica se exserit folliculo,Sen. Ep. 124, 11. —So of fruits, Varr. R. R. 1, 48, 1; Col. 2, 8, 5; Plin. 24, 8, 33, § 49; 24, 9, 40, § 65: folliculus animalium,id. 30, 12, 37, § 111: muliebris, i. q. vulva, acc. to Serv. Verg. G. 3, 136.—Poet., the shell of an egg: teretes (cicadarum),Lucr. 5, 803; and of the human body, as the husk or shell of the soul: ego, si qui sum et quo folliculo sum indutus, queo, Lucil. ap. Non. 110, 27.
* Esp., as med. t. t. (late Lat.).
* A sac: ventris,Cael. Aur. Acut. 3, 17, 154.
* The bladder, Cael. Aur. Tard. 4, 3, 24.
* The scrotum, Cael. Aur. Acut. 3, 17, 165; id. Tard. 3, 8, 106; called in full, folliculum genitale,id. ib. 3, 8, 104.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary