Extrudo, trûdis, trúsi, trûsum, pen. prod. trúdere. To thrust out: to driue out.Extrudere ædibus.Plaut.Extrudere ex ædibus. Plau. Extrudere foras.Plaut.Extrudere inuitum. Ter. To thrust out one againste his will.Extrudere aliquem in viam.Cic.To make one depart on his iourney. Extrudi, per translationem, pro Abalienari: vt, Extrudi ab aliquo.Cic.To be put from one.Extrudere domo sua aliquem.Cic.To thruste one out of hys house.Extrudi & prohiberi, contraria.Cic.Extrudere aliquem, id est, accelerare.Cic.To hasten one, or set him foorth with speede.Extrudere tabellarios.Cic.To haste forwarde the carriers.Merces extrudere, Horat.To vtter or sell away his wares.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ex-trūdo, si, sum, 3, v. a., to thrust out or forth, to drive out, drive away (class.; syn. eicio). I.Lit.: me ex aedibus, Plaut. Aul. 1, 1, 5; for which: me aedibus, id. ib. 31: me foras, id. Truc. 1, 1, 68; Ter. Eun. 4, 5, 11: a latebris suis extrusi hostes, Tac. Agr. 33: te in viam, simulac perpaululum gustaris, extrudam et eiciam,
will drive out
, Cic. de Or. 2, 58, 234; cf. id. Fam. 14, 6; id. Att. 16, 2, 4: is tamquam extruderetur a senatu in Macedoniam, id. Phil. 10, 5, 10. —Absol.: illam extrudet cum hanc ducet domum, Plaut. Cist. 2, 1, 63.—B.Transf., with inanimate objects: (ventus) extrudit saxa, Lucr. 6, 692: extruso mari aggere ac molibus, kept out, Caes. B. G. 3, 12, 3: Euboea ad meridiem promontorium Geraeston et Capharea extrudit,
sends out
,
shoots out
, Mel. 2, 7, 9: merces,
to put off
,
to sell
, Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 11.— II.Trop., to crowd out: rerum novitate extrusa vetustas, Lucr. 3, 964.