Exundo, exundas, exundâre. Plin. To ouerslowe: to abounde.Riuis per quos exundat piscina. Colu. Into whiche the poole or ponde reth.Dolor exundat altè mersus. Seneca. The griefe deepely hid breaketh out.Eloquentiam exundare. & exuberare. Tacit.Furor exundans.Stat.Raging or boyling furie.Præruptum exundar pelagus. Sil. The sea swelling breaketh out.Pestis exundat. Sil. The plague rageth, or spreadeth farre.Terra exundauit Chelydris. Sil. The lande was full of those serpents.Vapor exundat antro. Seneca. A great vapour reaketh out of the deune.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ex-undo, āvi, 1, v. n. and a.I.Neutr., to flow out or over, to overflow (poet. and in post-Aug. prose). A.Lit.: fons, Plin. 2, 103, 106, 229: per quos (rivos) exundat piscina, Col. 8, 17, 6: trunco cruor exundat, Sen. Agam. 903.—B.Transf.1.To be washed up, thrown out by the waves: tura balsamaque vi tempestatum in adversa litora exundant, Tac. G. 45.—2.To pour forth abundantly, to rush forth; to overflow with any thing: flammarum exundat torrens, Sil. 14, 62; cf.: exundant diviso vertice flammae, Stat. Th. 12, 431: spiritus (morientis) exundans perflavit campum, Sil. 5, 455: inde Medusaeis terram exundasse chelydris, id. 3, 316: exundans ingenii fons, Juv. 10, 119: exundat et exuberat eloquentia, Tac. Or. 30: temperare iram; eoque detracto quod exundat, ad salutarem modum cogere, which superabounds, is in excess, Sen. de Ira, 1, 7.— II.Act., to pour forth abundantly: fumum, Sil. 2, 631.