Peregrînor, pen. prod peregrinâris, peregrinári. Cicer.To goe into strange countries: to dwell or be in a strange country.Nos in nostra vrbe peregrinantes, errantesque tanquam hospites, tui libri quasi domum deduxerunt, Cic.Beeing as it were strangers in our owne countrey.Longè lareque peregrinari.Cic.To go farre abroade in dyuers strange countries.Iu aliena ciuitate peregrinari.Cic.To bee as a straunger in a forraine citie.Peregrinari rem aliquam.Cic.To seeke farre for a thing.Peregrinatur philosophia Romæ. Cicero. Philosophie is in Rome as a straunger.Vestræ peregrinantur aures, neque in hoc peruagato ciuitatis sermone versantur? C.Are your eares a pilgrimage, or abroade in strange countries, & heare not those things which here in the citie are in euerie mans mouth?
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
pĕrĕgrīnor, ātus, 1, v. dep. n. [id.], to be or live in foreign parts, to sojourn abroad, to travel about (class.; cf.: peragro, migro). I.Lit.: peregrinari totā Asiā, Cic. Brut. 13, 51: in alienā civitate, id. Rab. Perd. 10, 28: in terrā, Vulg. Gen. 47, 4. —II.Trop.A.To go abroad, to travel about; to roam, rove, or wander about: haec studia pernoctant nobiscum, peregrinantur, rusticantur, Cic. Arch. 7, 16: animus late longeque peregrinatur, id. N. D 1, 20, 54: in infinitatem omnem,
to roam through all infinity
, id. Tusc. 5, 39, 114.—B.To be abroad, be a stranger, a sojourner (cf. peregrinus, B.): philosophiae quasi civitatem dare, quae quidem adhuc peregrinari Romae videbatur, Cic. Fin. 3, 12, 40: vestrae peregrinantur aures?id. Mil. 12, 33.—With ab, to be absent from, a stranger to: a corpore, a Dei regno, Ambros. in Psa. 118, Serm. 12, 17; id. de Isaac et An. 5, 17; so, a Domino, Vulg. 2 Cor. 5, 6; cf. id. ib. 5, 8.