Effluo, effluis. effluxi, effluxum, efflúere. Cato. To flowe or run out: to slide out or away: to be forgottÊ: to be published or spred abroad to passe away.Influere & Effluere, contraria.Cic.Vinum effluir. Cato. The wine runneth out.Statim effluxerit de ea. Var. It ran out of it, &c.Ex animo effluere.Cic.To be slipped out of mind: to be forgotten.Ex diseiplina aliquorum dicuntur esfluere multa, & ad aures aliorum permanare.Cic.Abundare & effluere: quibus opponitur deesse. Ci. To aboÛd and run ouer: to haue inough and too much.Desyderio alicuius effluere. Oui. To slide out of ones loue or longing: to be no more longed for. Aetas effluir.Cic.Age passeth.Effluit æstas.Cic.Sumner passeth away.Effluit genitura morbo. Plin. Seede issueth by sicknes vnwil. lingly.Mens effluit. Cice. He is out of his matter: he forgetteth what he would speake or vtter.EffluÛt vires lassitudine. Li. He waxeth faint with wearines.Effluit vita cum sanguine.Cic.He vied bleeding.Effluunt præteritæ voluptates. Cicero. Pleasures passe away lightly. Effluet, per translationem. Ter. It shal abroade: al men shal knowe it: I wil not keepe it secret. Præterijt & effluxit Cic It is past and clean gone.Quod totum effluxerat. Ci. Al which I had forgotten, or was stipped out of my memory.Bona præterita non effluere sapienti oporter. Ci. A wise man must not forget the good things that haue chanced to hym before.Dicta animo effluxerunt. Catul.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ef-flŭo, xi, 3, v. n. (and very rarely a.), to flow or run out, to flow forth (class.; esp. freq. in the trop. sense). I.Lit.: facit effluere imbres, Lucr. 6, 512: una cum sanguine vita, Cic. Tusc. 2, 24 fin.: umor e cavis populi nigrae, Plin. 24, 8, 32, 47: sucina petris, id. 37, 2, 11, 35: amnis in oceanum, id. ib.: ne qua levis effluat aura,
escape
, Ov. M. 6, 233.—Poet.: ambrosiae et nectari' linctus, Lucr. 6, 971, v. Lachm. ad h. l.—B.Act.: ne (amphorae) effluant vinum, Petr. 71, 11; cf. Claud. Prob. et Olyb. 52.—C.Transf., of non-fluid bodies, to go out, issue forth (poet. and in post-Aug. prose): Epicuri figurae, quas e summis corporibus dicit effluere, Quint. 10, 2, 15 Spald.; cf. Gell. 5, 16, 3: effluit effuso cui toga laxa sinu, Tib. 1, 6, 40 (dub.—Müll. et fluit); cf. Claud. IV. Cons. Honor. 208: manibus opus effluit,
slips from
,
drops from
, Lucr. 6, 795; cf. Ov. M. 3, 39; Curt. 8, 14.— 2.To vanish, disappear: de pectore caedis notae, Ov. M. 6, 670; cf. Suet. Aug. 97; Plin. 27, 13, 111, 138.—II.Trop.: utrumque hoc falsum est: effluet, i. e. it will go abroad, become known = emanabit, Ter. Eun. 1, 2, 41; cf. Auct. Or. pro Domo, 46, 121: impropria interim effluunt,
slip out
, Quint. 10, 3, 20: tanta est intimorum multitudo, ut ex iis aliquis potius effluat, quam novo sit aditus, Cic. Fam. 6, 19, 2: ne effluant haec ab oculis tuis, Vulg. Prov. 3, 21.—2.To pass away, disappear, vanish (cf. I. B. 2.): praeterita aetas quamvis longa cum effluxisset, Cic. de Sen. 2, 4; cf. id. ib. 19, 69; id. Att. 12, 43 fin.; Quint. 11, 2, 44: viso mens aegra effluxit hiatu, Sil. 6, 245; cf.: effluet in lacrimas,
to melt
,
dissolve
, Luc. 9, 106.—So esp. to escape from the memory: ut istuc veniam ante quam plane ex animo tuo effluo,