- claudico
- claudĭco ( clōdĭco, Cic. de Or. 2, 61, 249, like Claudius and Clodius, codex and caudex, etc., v. au), āre, v. n. [claudeo; like albico, candico from albeo, candeo], to limp, halt, be lame (class.).I.Prop.:B.
Carvilio graviter claudicanti ex vulnere,
Cic. de Or. 2, 61, 249; Ov. F. 3, 758; Col. 6, 12, 3; Suet. Aug. 80; Just. 6, 2, 6.—In Lucretius, meton., of other irregular or unbalanced motions, to waver, wabble, halt; of the lame wings of birds, Lucr. 6, 834;II.of the wavering of balances or scales,
id. 4, 515; and of the earth's axis, id: 6, 1107.—Trop., to halt, waver, to be wanting, incomplete or defective:claudicat ingenium,
Lucr. 3, 453:tota res vacillat et claudicat, Cic. N. D, 1, 38, 107: vereri ne tota amicitia quasi claudicare videatur,
id. Fin. 1, 20, 69; so id. Brut. 63, 227; Liv. 22, 39, 3 (al. leg. claudo); Col. 4, 2, 1; Just. 6, 2, 5 and 6:ut constare possimus nobismet ipsis nec in ullo officio claudicare,
Cic. Off. 1, 33, 119; cf.:in comoediā, claudicamus,
Quint. 10, 1, 99.—So of discourse:ne sermo in aequalitate horum omnium sicut pedum claudicet,
Quint. 11, 3, 43:si quid in nostrā oratione claudicat,
Cic. de Or. 3, 51, 198.—And once of the measure of a verse: claudicat hic versus;haec, inquit, syllaba nutat,
Claud. Epigr. 79, 3.
Lewis & Short Latin Dictionary, 1879. - Revised, Enlarged, and in Great Part Rewritten. Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and Charles Short. 2011.