Perfodio, perfodis, pen. cor perfódi, pe. pro. perfossum, perfódere. Col. To dig through to the bottome, or to the deepest of a thing: to pierce through: to strike through.Terram perfodere. Col. To dig deepely in the ground.Perfodere parietes.Cic.To pierce, or make holes through.Perfodere montem.Cic.To make a way or passage through an hil.Perfodi gladijs. Gel. To be sticked or gored with swordes.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
per-fŏdĭo, fōdi (perfodīvi, Plaut. Mil. 2, 1, 64 Ritschl N. cr.), fossum, 3, v. a.I.To dig through, to pierce through, transfix (class.): parietes, Plaut. As. 3, 2, 17: parietem, id. l. l.; Cic. Vatin. 5, 11; Vulg. Matt. 24, 43: montem, Varr. R. R. 3, 17, 9: Athone perfosso, Cic. Fin. 2, 34, 112: thorax perfossus, Verg. A. 11, 10: pectus, Plin. Ep. 3, 16, 6: pectora, Stat. Th. 9, 522: spinā argenteā dentes,
to pick
, Petr. 33.—Hence, 2.To break into: perfodit in tenebris domos, Vulg. Job, 24, 16; id. Matt. 24, 43.—II.To make by digging through: fretum, Liv. 33, 17, 6.