Peragro, peragras, pen. cor. peragrâre, Ex per, & ager, agri, cõpositum. Cic.To walke, go, or runne about a place: to trauel ouer.Campos & montes hyeme & æstate peragrantes.Cic.Agros & nemora peragrare.Cic.In libore militari peragrare Asiam. Ci. To trauaile ouer al Asia in warrefare.Belli diuersa peragrat.Val. Flac.Loca auia peragro. Lucre. I tranaile ouer wildernesses and solttarie places.Peragrare pedibus maria, classibus montes. Cicero. To goe on foote ouer all the seas, and with shippes to saile ouer mountaines.Prouincias omnes peragrasse gloriatur Asellus.Cic.Regiones has arma Pop. Rom. peragrarunt. Cic.Rura peragrare.Cic. Saltus peragrat. Virg. Vltr qum sines imperij Pop. Rom. sunt. non solùm fama iam de illo, sed etiam lætitia peragrauit. Cice. Not onely the fame of that acte, but also the ioye conceiued for it, is spread beyond the bounds of the Romaine empire.Mente regiones peragrare.Cicer.In thought and minde to trauaile ouer countries.Peragrare per animos hominum, per translationem.Cic.To touch al the partes and affectious of mens mindes, as an oratour doth in an oration.Latebras suspicionum peragrare.Cicer.To seeke all conicctures whereof suspition may rise.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
pĕr-āgro, āvi, ātum, 1 (part. peragratus, in the dep. signif.; v. infra), v. a. [per and ager], to wander or travel through or over, to go or pass through, traverse, etc. (class.; cf. percurro). I.Lit.: provincias, Cic. de Or. 2, 64, 258.—Of bees: saltus silvasque, Verg. G. 4, 53: loca avia, Lucr. 1, 926: in peragrandā Aegypto, Suet. Aug. 93: peragratis partibus, Vulg. Act. 19, 1.—Of sailing: litora Liburnicis, Suet. Calig. 37: eques Romanus qui et commercia ea et litora peragravit, Plin. 37, 3, 11, 45; Flor. 2, 7, 6; Just. 12, 10, 1.—(b).Dep. only in part.: peragratus omnes Germaniae partes, etc., Vell. 2, 97, 4.—II.Trop., to go through, traverse, to spread through; to search through, penetrate: omne immensum peragravit mente animoque, Lucr. 1, 74: eloquentia omnes peragravit insulas, Cic. Brut. 13, 51: cujus res gestae omnes gentes terrā marique peragrassent, id. Balb. 6, 16; id. Mil. 35, 98; id. Cael. 22, 53.—Rarely with per: orator ita peragrat per animos hominum, ut, etc., Cic. de Or. 1, 51, 222: gula peragrans,