Illabor, pe. pro. illaberis, illapsus sum, illabi. Ci. To stide or slip in: to, run or flow in: to fal in: to enter in.Ad eos cum suauitate illabitur.Cic.It entreth to the fenses with a certaine pleasantnesse.Medios iliapsus in hostes. Vir. Running into.Pernicies illapsa ciuium animos.Cic.Mischief fallen or entered into the citizens mindes.Illabitur vrbi, & illabitur mari, hoc est, in vrbem & in mare. Vir. Plin. It slideth forth in to.Amni Tyberino illabitur Nar. Lucan. It runneth or floweth into Tyber.Truncus illapsus cerebro. Hor.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
illābor (inl-), psus, 3, v. dep. n. [inlabor], to fall, slip, slide, glide, or flow into; to fall down, sink down (rare but class.). I.Lit.: quo (i. e. in stomachum) primo illabuntur ea, quae accepta sunt ore, Cic. N. D. 2, 54, 135; Plin. 5, 29, 31, 113: antennis illabitur ebria serpens, Claud. III. Cons. Stil. 367: notae jugis illabitur Aetnae, id. Rapt. Pros. 3, 330: si fractus illabatur orbis,
, Luc. 5, 281: qua Nar Tiberino illabitur amni, id. 1, 475. —II.Trop., to flow into, penetrate: si ea sola voluptas esset, quae quasi titillaret sensus, ut ita dicam, et ad eos cum suavitate afflueret et illaberetur, Cic. Fin. 1, 11, 39: sensim pernicies illapsa civium in animos, id. Leg. 2, 15, 39: da, pater, augurium, atque animis illabere nostris,
enter into our minds
, Verg. A. 3, 89: animis illapsa voluptas, Sil. 15, 95; with per, id. 11, 400.