Lewis Short
(verb) : scătūrĭo, īre (
* Imperf. scaturribat, App. M. 4, p. 145, 8), scateo, to stream, flow, or gush out (not before the Aug. period, and very rare).
* Lit.: scaturiens aqua,Pall. 1, 33 fin.: de summo vertice fons scaturribat (i. e. -riebat),App. M. 4, 6, p. 145, 8: oleum de terrā,Ampel. Lib. Mem. 8, § 5.
* Transf., like scateo.
* To come forth in great numbers, to swarm, abound: vermiculi,Auct. Priap. 4, 6 fin.: vermes,Vulg. 2 Macc. 9, 9.
* To be full of, filled with, abound in a thing.
* Lit.: solum, quod fontibus non scaturiat,Col. 3, 1, 8.
* Trop.: (Curio) totus, ut nunc est, hoc scaturit, he is all possessed with it, Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 4, 2: aurae scaturientes sermonis, Prud. στεφ. 10, 551.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary