Inspiro, inipíras, penul. prod. inspirâre. Colum. To blowe in: to inspire.Granaria modicis fenestellis Aquilonibus inspirentur. Col Let the granarde be aired with the northren wind, let in at smal windowes.Inspirare aliquid oculo per fistulam. Col. To blowe a thing into ones eye with an hollow pipe.Tacitum inspirat amorem.Stat.He inipireth a secret loue.Occultum inspires ignem.Virg.Venenam inspirant morsibus. Vir. They infect with poison by their birings.Inspirare alicui liceræ, pro illi aspirationem præponere. Gel. To pronounce a letter with an aspiration.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
in-spīro, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n., to blow into or upon a thing; to breathe into, inspire (poet. and post-Aug.). I.Lit., to blow into; with the simple acc.: foramen, Plin. 10, 29, 43, 84.—To blow upon; with abl.: fistulā sensim graviusculum sonum inspirare,
to blow upon the flute
,
produce by blowing on the flute
, Gell. 1, 11, 13: Atticos ixqu/n, i(ro/n inspirantis primae litterae dixisse, to pronounce with a breathing, to aspirate a letter, id. 2, 3, 2.—With dat.: alicui animam,
to breathe into
, Vulg. Sap. 15, 11; cf.: in faciem ejus spiraculum vitae, ib. Gen. 2, 7.—Impers.: si gravitati aurium per fistulas inspiretur, Plin. 34, 12, 32, 127. — II.Trop., to breathe into, inspire, excite, inflame: occultum ignem, Verg. A. 1, 688: magnam mentem animumque, id. ib. 6, 12: amorem, Stat. S. 1, 2, 194: fortitudinem, Curt. 4, 13, 12: iram, misericordiam, Quint. 12, 10, 62: quibus viribus inspiret (orator),
animate
,
inflame
, Quint. 2, 5, 8; 5, 14, 32.— B. Of religious feeling or influence, to inspire: unde adhuc, qui inspirari solent, fatuari dicuntur, Just. 43, 1, 8: vates, id. 18, 5, 7: Spiritu Sancto, Vulg. 2 Pet. 1, 21 et saep.—Hence, adv.: inspīrātē, inspiredly, benignantly, abundantly; only comp.: inspiratius, Val. Max. 3, 8, 2 (dub. al. insperatius).