Lewis Short
(verb) : trans-fīgo, xi, xum, 3
* To thrust or pierce through, to transpierce, transfix a thing or a person (class.; syn. traicio): sagittā Cupido cor meum transfixit,Plaut. Pers. 1, 1, 25: evelli jussit eam, quā erat transfixus, hastam,Cic. Fin. 2, 30, 97: transfixi pilis,Caes. B. G. 7, 62: Q. Fabium gladio per pectus transfigit,Liv. 2, 46, 4: stricto gladio simul verbis increpans transfigit puellam,id. 1, 26, 3: contrario ictu per parmam transfixus,id. 2, 6, 9: latus,id. 5, 36, 7: corpus,id. 21, 8, 11: transfigitur scutum Pulfioni,Caes. B. G. 5, 44: scuta uno ictu pilorum,id. ib. 1, 25: unguibus anguem, Cic. poët. Div. 1, 47, 106: transfixo pectore,Verg. A. 1, 44.—In a Greek construction: qui hastis corpus transfigi solent,Plaut. Most. 2, 1, 11; so, sonipes transfixus pectora ferro,Luc. 7, 528.
* To thrust something through a thing (poet. and very rare): latos huic hasta per armos Acta tremit duplicatque virum transfixa dolore,Verg. A. 11, 645: ora ducis transfixo deformia pilo,Luc. 9, 138.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary