Lewis Short
(verb) : ĭn-undo, āvi, ātum, 1, and n.
* Act., to overflow, inundate (class.).
* Lit.: terram inundet aqua,Cic. N. D. 1, 37, 103: imbres campis inundantes,Liv. 8, 24: Tiberis agros inundavit,id. 24, 9; 28, 28; 24, 38: Ciliciam cruore Persarum,Curt. 9, 2, 23: cruore campos,Lact. 1, 18, 10.
* Neutr.
* Trop.: lacrimae pectus,Petr. 113: meus ingenti flumine litterarum inundata,overflowing,id. 118; 101.
* To overflow, to be inundated or deluged; of a river: Arnus inundaverat,Liv. 22, 2, 2: Tiberis,Aur. Vict. Caes. 32, 3: aquae super terram,Vulg. Gen. 7, 6; Val. Max. 1, 7, 5.
* To be full, abound: inundant sanguine fossae,Verg. A. 10, 24; 11, 382.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary