Intingo, intingis, intinxi, intinctum, intíngere. Pli. To dip in, as one doth his finger in liquour.In acetum intingito. Cato. Dip them in vinegar.Intingere calamÛ: de seribente dixit Quint.To put his pen in the inkhorne.Intinctum arte.Cic.Very artificial.Cibi intincti.Ouid.Intinctus huius intinctus. m. g. Plin. Sauce.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
in-tingo or in-tinguo, nxi, nctum, 3, v. a. [tinguo], to dip in.I. In gen.: brassicam in acetum, Cato, R. R. 156: buccas rubricā cerā omne corpus intinxti tibi, Plaut. Truc. 2, 2, 39: faces in fossa sanguinis atra, Ov. M. 7, 260: aliquid in aqua, Vitr. 1, 5: quoad intinguntur calami, morantur manum (in writing on parchment), Quint. 10, 3, 31.— II. In partic. A.To dip in sauce or pickle; to pickle, preserve: omnibus, quae condiuntur, quaeque intinguntur, Plin. 20, 17, 72, 185.—B.To baptize, Tert. Poenit. 6 fin.