Intego, íntegis, pe. cor. intexi, intectum, intégere. Plau. To couer: to thetch.Integere habitabiles casas. Plin. To thetch.Integebantur porticus lignis coniunctis inter se. Cæs. Intecta stramento tecta.Liu.Thetched.Integi vallo.Liu.Crines integit casside. Sta. He put an helmet on his heade.Integumentum. ti, n. g. Liu.A couering.Inuolucra & integumenta.Cic.Things spoken couertly and darkely.Integumenta flagitiorum. Ci. Clokes to coner naughtines.Frontis integumentum.Cic.Dissimulationis integumentis cuolutus. Ci. His cloked dissimuling being dilcouered.
Intexo, intexis, intexi, intextom, intéxere. Vir. To weaue, knit, or fold in: to plarte with other things: to interlace or mingle.Læta tristibus inteximus.Cic.Intexere literas vestibus. Plin. To worke letters in their garments: to imbroder.Facta alicuius intexere chartis. Tibu. To interlace ones acts in writing.Venæ & arteriæ crebræ toto corpore intextæ.Cicer.Mary veines & arteries be crosse one ouer an other in al % body.Intexere aliquem.Cic.To bring in one as a person in a dialogue.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
in-tĕgo, xi, ctum, 3, v. a., to cover: villam, Plaut. Rud. 1, 2, 13: turres coriis, Caes. B. G. 7, 22: reliqua pars scrobis viminibus ac virgultis integebatur, id. ib. 7, 73: cum prima luce densa nebula saltum camposque intexit, Liv. 26, 17, 12; 27, 3, 3: casside crines, Stat. Th. 4, 303: Clitumnus flumina luco Integit, Prop. 2, 15 (3, 12), 25: statuas auro, Plin. 34, 4, 9, 15: viam, to arch over, Inscr. ap. Grut. 150, 1.—II.To protect: vidit cum loci altitudine tum vallo etiam integi Romanos, Liv. 7, 23, 6 Weissenb. ad loc.
in-texo, texŭi, textum, 3, v. a., to weave into, to inweave, interweave; to plait, join together, interlace, surround, cover.I.Lit.: purpureasque notas filis intexuit albis, Ov. M. 6, 577: diversos colores picturae, Plin. 8, 48, 74, 196: hastas foliis, Verg. E. 5, 31: vitibus ulmos, id. G. 2, 221: vestibus intexto Phrygiis spectabilis auro, Ov. M. 6, 166; cf. Curt. 9, 7, 12: cum chlamyde purpurea variis coloribus intexta,
embroidered
, Auct. Her. 4, 47, 60: intextus puer regius, Verg. A. 5, 252; id. G. 3, 25: hederae intexere truncos, Ov. M. 4, 365.—B. Esp., to weave, make by weaving or interlacing: tribus intextum tauris opus,
of hides
, Verg. A. 10, 785: sterili junco cannaque intexta palustri, Luc. 5, 517: ex lino, Plin. 10, 33, 50, 96; cf.: latera intextus stellatis axibus agger, Sil. 13, 109.—II.Trop.: facta chartis, to interweave on paper, i. e. to describe, Tib. 4, 1, 5: parva magnis, laeta tristibus, Cic. Part. 4, 12: aliquid in causa prudenter, id. de Or. 2, 16, 68: Varronem, id. Att. 13, 12, 3: tali te vellem ritu inter soles ... naturae rerum magnis intexere chartis, to interweave in a poem on nature your fame, etc., Verg. Cir. 39.