- concurso
- con-curso, āre, v. freq. n. and a.I.To come violently together, to rush together, clash:II.
concursare, coire et dissultare vicissim (semina),
Lucr. 3, 396.—Far more freq. and class.,To go to and fro, run about, rush hither and thither, travel about (cf. commeo).A.Neutr.:2.nunc hinc, nunc illinc,
Lucr. 2, 215:Titurius trepidare, concursare, etc.,
Caes. B. G. 5, 33:concursabant barbatuli juvenes,
Cic. Att. 1, 14, 5:dies noctesque,
id. Rosc. Am. 29, 81; Liv. 4, 6, 9; 5, 8, 8:circum tabernas,
Cic. Cat. 4, 8, 17:per viam,
Liv. 9, 24, 12: cum concursant ceteri praetores, to travel about (corresp. with tempus in itineribus consumere), Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 12, § 29; and impers. pass.:in his administrandis rebus quam maxime concursari jubet,
Caes. B. G. 5, 50. —In milit. lang., to skirmish: in proelio, [p. 406] Liv. 28, 2, 7; cf. concursatio, III. 2., and concursator.—B.Act.: concursare aliquid, to rove or ramble somewhere, to visit a place, to frequent (only in Cic.; sometimes interchanged with circumcurso;v. h. v.): cum jam hoc novo more omnes fere domos omnium concursent,
to go from house to house, Cic. Mur. 21, 44:concursare et obire provinciam (praetores),
id. Verr. 2, 5, 31, § 80; cf.the preced.: concursare omnium mortalium non modo lectos, verum etiam grabatos,
id. Div. 2, 63, 129; cf.:concursare lecticula mecum,
id. Fam. 7, 1, 5.
Lewis & Short Latin Dictionary, 1879. - Revised, Enlarged, and in Great Part Rewritten. Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and Charles Short. 2011.