LAT

Lewis Short

(verb) : lascīvĭo, ĭi, ītum, 4, lascivus
* To be wanton, petulant, sportive, to sport, frisk, frolic (not freq. till after the Aug. per.).
* Lit.: licet lascivire, dum nihil metuas, *Cic. Rep. 1, 40, 63: Ap. Claudius ait, lascivire magis plebem quam saevire,Liv. 2, 29, 9: licentiam lasciviendi permittere militi,Suet. Caes. 67: eo principio lascivire miles,Tac. A. 1, 16: exsilit agnus Lascivitque fuga,and wantonly frisks away,Ov. M. 7, 321; cf. Col. 6, 24: angues ... lascivientium piscium modo exsultasse,Liv. 27, 5. —Poet.: dextera lascivit caesa Tegeatide capra (of the Luperci, who wantonly struck at passers-by),Sil. 13, 329: ferratus lascivit apex,Claud. Rapt. Pros. 2, 145: quis lascivit aquis et ab aethere ludit,Mart. 4, 3, 7. —Esp.: in Venerem,to be lascivious,Col. 6, 24, 2.
* Trop., to indulge in license of language or style (a favorite expression of Quintilian): lascivimus syntonorum modis saltitantes,Quint. 9, 4, 142; cf. id. 11, 1, 56: toto et rerum et verborum et compositionis genere lasciviunt,id. 4, 2, 39: puerilibus sententiolis,id. 12, 10, 73; cf. id. 9, 4, 28; 9, 4, 6: Ovidius lascivire in Metamorphosesi solet,Quint. 4, 1, 77.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

TLL

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Thesaurus Linguae Latinae
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