Reformo, reformas, reformâre. Pli. iu. To reforme: to renewe: to bring to the old state againe.Reformare & corrigere mores. Pli. iun. Reformare ad exemplum.To amende a thing according to the erample or paterne. Reformare & velut recoquere. Quint. Vectigalia non reformare. Hermogenianus. Not to appoint new rents or tribntes.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
rĕ-formo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to shape again, remould, transform, metamorphose, change (not ante-Aug.). I.Lit.: sed preme, quicquid erit, dum, quod fuit ante, reformet, i.e.
until she resumes her first shape
, Ov. M. 11, 254; cf. id. ib. 9, 399: rursus in facies hominum tales figuras, App. M. 3, p. 139, 26: aliquem in alienam personam, id. ib. 11fin.: hunc (asinum) ad homines, id. ib. 11, p. 264, 24: corpus humilitatis nostrae, Vulg. Phil. 3, 21: claudorum pedes ad officium gradiendi, Lact. 4, 26, 1.—II.Trop.1.To change, alter: divinae providentiae fatalis dispositio subverti vel reformari non potest, App. M. 9, p. 217, 27: sententias in pejus, Dig. 49, 1, 1: cum Themistocles ruinas patriae in pristinum habitum reformaret, Val. Max. 6, 5, 2ext.—2. Pregn., to amend, reform; of persons: (quadragenarius pupillus) non potest reformari, Sen. Ep. 25, 1: sed reformamini in novitate sensūs vestri, Vulg. Rom. 12, 2.— Of things: imitari proposita et ad illa reformare chirographum, Sen. Ep. 94, 51: mores depravatos, Plin. Pan. 53, 1; so, solutam et perditam disciplinam, Eum. Pan. Const. 2. — 3.To restore, re-establish: pacem, Eutr. 9, 20.