Clareo, clares, clárui, clarêre. To appeare: to be cleare: to be well knowne. Et pertranslationem. To be notable, famous, or renowmed.Gloria viri claret Ennius.Is famous and knowne.Cuius aduentu insula hodie claret Cypros.Cic.Familiæ clarent. Suet. Claret lumen. Ennius. Figura nota clarere.Cic. Forma simili clarere. Cic.Claret. Lucret. It is cleare.Claret hi. Claud. I vnderstand it.
Claro, claras, clarâre, Clarum ostendere. To make notable or knowne: to declare or shewe.Iter longæ clarauit limite flammæ.Stat.Shewed the way with, &c.Labor clarat pugilem. Horat. Maketh him knowne.Mulca nobis clarandum est. Lucret. We must declare many things.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
clārĕo, ēre, v. n. [clarus]. I. Prop., to be clear or bright, to shine (poet.): hoc lumen candidum claret mihi, Enn. ap. Non. p. 85, 25 (Trag. Rel. v. 367 Rib.); so of stars, Cic. Arat. 5 (240); 107 (348).—II.Trop.A.To be obvious or clear, evident or manifest (poet. rare): quod in primo quoque carmine claret,
which is evident also in the first canto
, Lucr. 6, 937: mihi satis claret, with acc. and inf., Spart. Sev. 20, 4 Spald. and Zumpt N. cr.—B. Of character, to be distinguished, illustrious, famous, renowned (ante-class.): (Fab. Maximi) gloria claret, Enn. ap. Cic. Sen. 4, 10 (Ann. v. 315 Vahl.); Turp. ap. Non. p. 85, 22 (Com. Rel. v. 152 Rib.).
clāro, āvi, 1, v. a. [clarus], to make bright or clear, to illuminate (poet. and very rare). I.Lit.: Juppiter excelsā clarabat sceptra columnā, showed, exhibited, Cic. poët. Div 1, 12, 21: aestatis primordia, id. Arat. 39: iter longae limite flammae, Stat. Th. 5, 286.—II.Trop.A. Mentally, to make clear, evident, to explain, illustrate, set forth: animae naturam versibus, Lucr. 3, 36: multa, id. 4, 778: obscura, App. de Deo Socr. p. 51, 15.—B. Morally, to make illustrious, to render famous: illum non labor Isthmius Clarabit pugilem, Hor C. 4, 3, 4.