Asporto, asportas, asportâre. Ter. To carse away: to cary to.Multa de luis rebus lecum asportare.Cic.Nec te comitem hinc asportare Creusam Fas.Virg.To carie with thee.Asportari Alexandriam iuberent ad virum vxorem.Liu.Asportare ex aliquo loco virginem.Cic.To conuey away.In Macedoniam asportara fuerat.Liu.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
as-porto [abs-porto; cf. ab init.], āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to bear, carry, or take off or away (in the class. per. only in prose; cf. Wagner ad Verg. A. 2, 778).—Com., a. Of things: simulacrum e signo Cereris, Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 49 fin.; so id. ib. 2, 1, 20; id. Div. in Caecil. 9, 28: multa de suis rebus, id. Par. 1, 2: sua omnia Salamina, Nep. Them. 2 fin.; Liv. 2, 4; 42, 3; Vulg. 2 Reg. 12, 30.—Also, b. Of persons, to carry away (esp. by ship) to transport: aliquem trans mare, Plaut. Merc. 2, 3, 19: virginem, id. Rud. prol. 67: quoquo hinc asportabitur terrarum, Ter. Phorm. 3, 3, 18: asportate ossa mea vobiscum, Vulg. Gen. 50, 24; ib. Dan. 5, 2.