Lewis Short
(adverb) : pĕrĕger (-gris), comm. per-ager, who has gone through lands, i. e.
* Who is on a journey, abroad, away from home (postclass.): si pereger factus sit, Ulp. Reg. tit. 17, 1 (dub.; Huschke, peregrinus): nedum me peregrem composita fabulari,Aus. Ep. 17: susceptor peregrum, Ven. Carm. 4, 10, 14.—Hence, , in two forms, peregre and (ante- and post-class.) peregri, abroad, away from home.
* Pĕrĕgrē, answering to the question where? whence? or whither?
* To the question where? qui peregre depugnavit, abroad, Cic. Phil. 5, 11, 30: dum peregre est animus sine corpore velox,Hor. Ep. 1, 12, 13: habitare,Liv. 5, 52: spectacula dare,Suet. Calig. 20: esse,Vulg. Luc. 20, 9.
* Pĕrĕgrī, abroad, away from home, to the question where? (ante- and post-class.): peregrique et domi,Plaut. Am. prol. 5; so opp. domi,id. ib. 1, 1, 196: patriam ut colatis potius quam peregri probra, Naev. ap. Charis. p. 189 P. (Com. Rel. p. 19 Rib.): peregri necandus, Prud. στεφ. 4, 89.
* To the question whither? abroad, to foreign parts: postquam peregre hinc ejus pater abiit,Plaut. Most. 4, 2, 41: peregre abire,Plin. 35, 12, 43, § 151: proficisci,Suet. Caes. 42: rusve peregreve exire,Hor. S. 1, 6, 103: argentum ferre,Gai. Inst. 3, 196: proficisci,Vulg. Matt. 25, 14.
* Like peregri (v. infra), abroad, not at home, Plaut. Pers. 1, 1, 30.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary