Enôdis, & hoc enôde, pe. pro. Plin. Without knottes.Trunci enodes.Virg. Enode etiam dicitur, quod sine difficultate est. Pl. iu. Plain without difficultie.
Enodo, enódas pe. pro. enodâre. Non. To vnknit, or cut awaye the knottes. Enodare dicuntur arbores, quum podi eis amputantur. Ca. Col. When men cut the knottes from trees. Enodare.Cic.To deciare: to make manifest: to explicate or dissolne.Enodare & explicare. Accius. Voluntatem contrariæ legis enodare. Author ad Her. To expound and declare the meaning of the contrary law.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ēnōdis, e, adj. [nodus], free from knots, without knots (poet. and in post-Aug. prose). I. Prop.: trunci, Verg. G. 2, 78; cf. cedri, Claud. Rapt. Pros. 3, 360: nitor arborum, Plin. 5, 1, 1, 14: harundo, Mart. Cap. 9, 906.—B.Transf., smooth, supple: artus (al. arcus) laterum, Claud. ap. Eutr. 2, 361.—II.Trop., of speech, clear, plain, intelligible: elegi, Plin. Ep. 5, 17, 2; Ambros. Ep. 1, 12; id. in Luc. 7, 136 init.