Intercalâris, & hoc intercalâre. pe pro. Put or set betweene: vt Mensis Februarius intercalaris dicitur, quòd ei dies vnus interseratur. Diésque ipse insititius, intercalaris latinè dicitur. Plin. The odde day of the leape yeare.Intercalaris annus quem Bissextilem dicimus. Pli. The leap yeare.Intercalares Calendæ. Ci. The Calendes of March, because in % latter end of Februarle, that is reputed as % Calends of march the odde daies of the leape yeare wexe added.Intercalares versus. Seru. The foote or refrette of the ditie: a verse often interlaced.
Intercalo, intércalas, pe. cor. intercalâre. Plin. To set or put betweene, as a day or yeare: to defer.Hoc tibi ita mando, vt dubitem an etiam re rogem, vt pugnes ne intercaletur.Cic.That you would contend or earnesily indeuour that an other yeare be not interlated or put betweene. Intercalare.Liu.To deferre: Hanc vt inter calatæ pœnæ vsuram habeant. Liu.Of their punishment deferred.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
intercălāris, e, adj. [intercalo], of or for insertion, that is to be or is inserted, intercalary: dies,
an intercalary day
, Plin. 2, 8, 6, 35; Censor. de Die Nat. 20; Macr. S. 1, 13; Sol. 1: mensis,
an intercalary month
, Macr. S. 1, 13; Censor. l. l.: Kalendae,
the first day of an intercalary month
, Cic. Quint. 25, 79; Liv. 43, 11, 13; 45, 44, 3: Calendae priores, the first day of the first intercalary month (of the two months that Cæsar intercalated), Cic. Fam. 6, 14, 2; cf. the foll. art.—II.Transf.: versus, with a refrain or burden (as in Verg. E. 8: incipe Maenalios, etc.; and: ducite ab urbe domum), Serv. ib. 21.
inter-călo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., lit., to proclaim that something has been intercalated, to insert, intercalate a day or month (syn.: interpono, intericio); usu. in pass.: si intercalatum erit Calendis Maiis, Cato, R. R. 159: ut duodecim annis continuis non intercalaretur, Suet. Caes. 40: fasti intercalandi licentiā turbati, id. ib.: dies intercalatus, Macr. S. 1, 14fin. — Impers.: quando primo intercalatum sit, Macr. S. 1, 13, 19.— Act. absol.: Junius Servium Tullium regem primum intercalasse commemorat, Macr. S. 1, 13, 20. The pontifices, to whom it was left to determine the number of intercalary days, were often induced, by party considerations, to insert more or fewer than the proper number of days, or even to neglect the intercalation altogether.—Hence, pass. impers.: illud memento curare ... ut annus noster maneat suo statu, ne quid novi decernatur; hoc tibi ita mando ... ut pugnes, ne intercaletur, Cic. Att. 5, 9, 2.—II.Transf.: intercalata poena, i. e.