Odôro, odóras, pen. prod. odorare. Colu. To make to sinel well: to make to haue a good sauour: to perfume: to make odoriferous.Odorare mella. Colum. To make hony haue a good sauour.Odorant aerá fumis.Ouid.
Odôrus, pen. prod. Adiectiuum. Stat.That hath a good sauour: that sendeth forth or casteth a good sauour.Arbor odora.Ouid.Flos odorus.Ouid.A sweete smelling flower.Sulfur odorum. Claud. Odora canum vis.Virg.The vertue of senting or smelling in houndes.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
ŏdōro, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [odor], to give a smell or fragrance to, to perfume a thing (poet. and in post-Aug. prose; cf.: oleo, fragro): odorant aëra fumis, Ov. M. 15, 734: mella, Col. 9, 4, 4: caelum sulfure, Avien. Arat. 1430.—Hence, ŏdōrātus, a, um, P. a., that has a smell, that emits an odor; esp., sweet-smelling, fragrant: quid tibi odorato referam sudantia ligno Balsama?Verg. G. 2, 119: cedrus, id. A. 7, 13: pabula, Col. 8, 17, 1: capilli, Hor. C. 3, 20, 14: comae, Ov. A. A. 2, 734: nectare odorato spargit corpus, id. M. 4, 250: odoratis ignibus, id. ib. 15, 574: Indi,
in whose country sweetsmelling spices grow
, Sil. 17, 658: Armenii, Tib. 1, 5, 36: dux, the prince of the Parthians or Assyrians, who border on Arabia, Prop. 4 (5), 3, 64.—Comp.: vina mustis odoratiora, Plin. 21, 7, 18, 35.—Sup.: odoratissimi flores, Plin. 28, 8, 28, 108.
ŏdōrus, a, um, adj. [id.], emitting a scent or odor, odorous (mostly poet. and in post-Aug. prose for odoratus). I.Lit.A.Sweet-smelling, fragrant: flos, Ov. M. 9, 87: arbor, i. e. myrrha, id. A. A. 1, 287: res, Varr. L. L. 6, 83 Müll. dub.—Comp.: odorius, Plin. 20, 17, 69, 177.—Sup.: nardum Syriacum odorissimum, Isid. 17, 9, 3.—B.Ill-smelling, stinking (post-class.): lumen odorum Sulfure, Claud. VI. Cons. Hon. 324. II.Transf., that tracks by the smell, keenscented: odora canum vis (= copia odororum canum),