Imagino, as, pe. cor, are. To make images, to represent or caste % figure of ones image: vt Speculum imaginat. Gel. The glasse casteth an image.
Imaginor, pe. cor. imaginaris. imaginari, Plin. inn. To fmagfne: to conceiue.Imaginari aliquem. Pli, To imagine and deuise what maner of man one is.Imaginatio onis, f. g. Verbal. An imagination or conceiuing in the minde. vr Imaginationes Libidinum. Plin.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ĭmāgĭno, no perf., ātum, 1, v. a. [imago], to give an image of, to represent, fashion (post-class. and very rare): ut speculum in loco certo positum nihil imaginat, aliorsum translatum facit imagines, Gell. 16, 18, 3: terram digitis suis imaginatam metuere et adorare, Lact. 5, 13 fin.
ĭmāgĭnor, ātus, 1, v. dep. a. [id.], to picture to one's self, to fancy, imagine (postAug.): ipse etiam M. Tullius quaerit adhuc eum (eloquentem), et tantum imaginatur ac fingit, Quint. 12, 1, 21; 9, 2, 41; so, fercula triumphi, Plin. 9, 35, 58, 118: pavorem eorum, Tac. A. 15, 69: nec solum quae facta sint aut fiant, sed etiam quae futura sint aut futura fuerint, imaginamur, Quint. 9, 2, 41; Plin. Ep. 2, 10, 7; 5, 5, 5; Tert. Spect. 30 fin.: Venerem per somnia, Plin. 20, 13, 51, 143; so of dreams: Calpurnia uxor imaginata est, collabi fastigium domus, Suet. Caes. 81.