Lewis Short
scăbĭes (noun F) : scabo
* A roughness, scurf.
* Lit.
* In gen. (very rare): ferri (with robigo),Verg. G. 2, 220 (cf.: scabra robigo pilorum,id. ib. 1, 495): mali,Juv. 5, 153: vetusta cariosae testae,filth,App. M. 9, p. 220, 11; cf. Vulg. Lev. 13, 6.
* Trop. (acc. to I. B.), an itching, longing, pruriency (very rare): cujus (voluptatis) blanditiis corrupti, quae naturā bona sunt, quia dulcedine hac et scabie carent, non cernunt satis, * Cic. Leg. 1, 17, 47; so, scabies et contagia lucri,Hor. Ep. 1, 12, 14: nos hac a scabie (sc. rodendi, detrectandi) tenemus ungues,Mart. 5, 60, 11; so of lust, id. 6, 37, 4; 11, 7, 6.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary