corrado

A New Latin Dictionary by Charlton T. Lewis Ph.D. and Charles Short, LL. D.

cor-rādo (conr-), si, sum, 3, v. a., to scrape or rake together (rare; mostly anteand post-class.).

I Lit.: corpora, Lucr. 6, 304; cf. id. 6, 444.—Esp., of money, Plaut. Poen. 5, 6, 26; Ter. Ad. 242; Dig. 26, 7, 4 al.; and of the collecting together of one's effects for sale, Ter. Heaut. 141. —*

II Trop., to procure with difficulty : fidem dictis nostris, Lucr. 1, 402.

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