Lewis Short
(verb) : implecto (inpl-), xi, xum, 3, in-plecto
* To plait, wind, or twist into, to wind or twist among, to interweave, interlace, entwine (poet. and in post-Aug. prose; usually in the part. perf.).
* Lit.: multae hirudines dentibus (crocodili) implectuntur,App. Mag. p. 278: inplexis ita principiis,Lucr. 3, 33: dracones quaternos quinosque inter se cratium modo implexos,Plin. 8, 13, 13, § 35: capillus horrore implexus atque impeditus,App. Mag. p. 276; cf. in a Greek construction, caeruleos implexae crinibus angues Eumenides,Verg. G. 4, 482: manibus implexis,Sen. Ben. 1, 3; cf. App. M. 3, p. 135.—*
* Trop.: vidua implexa luctu continuo,implicated, involved, entangled,Tac. A. 16, 10, v. Orell. ad h. l.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary