Calceo, calceas, calceâre, vel calciare, per tertiam vocalem. Plin. To put on shoes, sockes or pynsons: to shoe a horse, &c.Calceare aliquem soccis. Plin. Calceatus cothurnis. Plin. Calceari, Passiuum. Plin. Calceare mulas. Suet. To shoe.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
calceo (calcio), āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [calceus], to furnish with shoes, to put on shoes, to shoe (class. in prose and poetry): calceati et vestiti, Cic. Cael. 26, 62; Suet. Aug. 78: cothurnis, Plin. 7, 20, 19, 83: soccis, id. 36, 5, 4, 41: calceandi pedes, Phaedr. 1, 14, 16; Plin. 7, 53, 54, 181: fibrinis pellibus, id. 32, 9, 36, 110: calceabat ipse sese, Suet. Vesp. 21 al.—B. Of animals (whose feet were furnished with shoes to be taken off and put on, not shod as with us): spartea quă animalia calceantur, Pall. 1, 24, 28: mulas, Suet. Vesp. 23: simias, Plin. 8, 54, 80, 215: calceatis pedibus, Veg. 3, 58, 2.— II.Trop.: calceati dentes,
facetè
,
well prepared for biting
, Plaut. Capt. 1, 2, 84: calceati pedes in praeparatione Evangelii, i. e.