Alicunde, Aduerbium de loco. Cic.From some place.Alicunde exora mutoum.Plaut.Borow of some person.Procul alicunde.Cic.Out of some place a farre of.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ălĭcunde, adv., of place [aliquis-unde], from somewhere = ab aliquo loco, Gr. a)mo/qen. I.Lit.: tu mihi aliquid aliquo modo alicunde ab aliquibus blatis, Plaut. Ep. 3, 1, 13; cf. verse 10: venit meditatus alicunde ex solo loco, Ter And. 2, 4, 3: aliunde fluens alicunde extrinsecus aër, streaming from some part from another source, Lucr. 5, 522: praecipitare alicunde, Cic. Fin. 5, 11, 31; so id. Caecin. 16, 46. —II.Transf.A. Of persons: alicunde exora mutuum, Plaut. Pers. 1, 1, 44: non quaesivit procul alicunde. Cic. Verr. 2, 20, 48.—Hence, alicunde corradere, to scrape together from some source, Ter. Ad. 2, 2, 34, and alicunde sumere, to get from somebody, i. e. to borrow from some one, id. Phorm. 2, 1, 70.—B. Of things: nos omnes, quibus est alicunde aliquis objectuslabor,
from any thing
, Ter. Hec. 3, 1, 6. (In Cic. Att. 10, 1, 3, B. and K. read aliunde for alicunde.)