Inundo, inundas, inundâre. Plin. To ouerflow: to surrounde.Terra infimum tenet, hanc inundat aqua.Cic.The water rÛneth aboue it.Inundari sanguine.Liu.To be all wette and courred wyth blond.Fossæ inundant sanguine. Vir. The ditches flow with bloud.Densi inundant Troes. Vir. The Troianes come on in greate number.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ĭn-undo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n.I.Act., to overflow, inundate (class.). 1.Lit.: terram inundet aqua, Cic. N. D. 1, 37, 103: imbres campis inundantes, Liv. 8, 24: Tiberis agros inundavit, id. 24, 9; 28, 28; 24, 38: Ciliciam cruore Persarum, Curt. 9, 2, 23: cruore campos, Lact. 1, 18, 10.—2.Transf., to spread over, run over, flood: inundant Troes, Verg. A. 12, 280: Cimbros inundasse Italiam, Just. 38, 4, 15: multitudo inundaverat campos, Curt. 4, 12, 20: Europam, id. 5, 7, 8: totam urbem civilis sanguinis fluminibus, Val. Max. 9, 2, 1: armis campos, Sil. 15, 551.—B.Trop.: lacrimae pectus, Petr. 113: meus ingenti flumine litterarum inundata,
overflowing
, id. 118; 101.—II.Neutr.A.To overflow, to be inundated or deluged; of a river: Arnus inundaverat, Liv. 22, 2, 2: Tiberis, Aur. Vict. Caes. 32, 3: aquae super terram, Vulg. Gen. 7, 6; Val. Max. 1, 7, 5.—B.To be full, abound: inundant sanguine fossae, Verg. A. 10, 24; 11, 382.