Luxo, luxas, luxâre. Plin. To loose: to put out of ioynt.Luxata. Plin. Limmes put out of ioynt.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
luxo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [Gr. loco/s, slanting, akin to obliquus, limus, licinus], to put out of joint, to dislocate. I.Lit.: luxatum si quod est, sanum faciet, Cato, R. R. 157: luxata in locum reponere, Sen. Ep. 104, 18: articulis luxatis, Plin. 30, 9, 23, 79: luxata corpora, id. 31, 6, 37, 71.—II.Transf., to put out of place, displace: luxare vitium radices, Plin. 17, 24, 37, 227: luxatae machinae,
luxor, āri, v. dep. [luxus], to riot, revel, live luxuriously: luxantur a luxu dictum, id est luxuriantur, Paul. ex Fest. p. 120 Müll.; cf. Non. 55, 15: luxantur, lustrantur, Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 5 Fleck.