Permisceo, permisces, permiscui, permistum, vel permixtÛ, permiscere. Cic.To mire or temper throughly togither.Permiscere & confundere.Cic.Permiscere omnia. Cice. To make a great trouble and businesse: to confounde all things.Omnia permisceri mallent.Cic.They would rather that all things should come to perdition and confusion.Permiscere Græciam dictus est.Cic.To trouble all Greece and set it in an vproare.Permisceri dulci aqua. Col. To be mingled with sweete water.Ne vino quidem permista temperari solet. Ci. No not when it was tempered with wine.Cœlum pelago permiscuit Eurus. Sil. The Easterne winde raised a great tempest and tronble on the seas.Permisti cum corpore animi. Cic Myrrham in ijsdem syluis permistam arborem nasci tradidere aliqui. Plin. Permiscere connubio. Pli. To be married or ioyned in wedlocke.Mortes permiscere. Luca.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
per-misceo, scŭi, stum, and xtum, 2, v. a., to mix or mingle together; to commingle, intermingle.I.Lit.: naturam cum materiā, Cic. Univ. 7: permixti cum suis fugientibus, Caes. B. G. 7, 62: permixtum senatui populi concilium, Liv. 21, 14: equites turbae hostium, id. 39, 51: fructus acerbitate permixti, Cic. Planc. 38, 92; Plin. 28, 17, 67, 231: generique cruorem Sanguine cum soceri permiscuit impius ensis, Ov. M. 14, 801: omnes in oratione esse quasi permixtos et confusos pedes, Cic. Or. 57, 195: (gagates lapis) medetur strumis cerae permixtus, Plin. 36, 19, 34, 142: corpora viva permista sepultis, Luc. 2, 152: alicui totum ensem,
to plunge his whole sword into his body
, Sil. 10, 259.—II.Trop.A. In gen., to mix or mingle together; to commingle, intermingle: ne tuas sordes cum clarissimorum virorum splendore permisceas, Cic. Vatin. 5, 13: tristia laetis, Sil. 13, 385: geminas e sanguine matris permistura domos, Luc. 2, 333: acerbitas morum ne vino quidem permista, Cic. Phil. 12, 11, 26.—Of language: quibus (intervallis longis et brevibus) implicata atque permixta oratio, Cic. Or. 56, 187.—B. In partic., to confound, disturb, throw into confusion, Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 50, 123: omnia, id. Planc. 17, 41; cf.: omnia divina humanaque jura permiscentur, Caes. B. C. 1, 6 fin.: domum, Verg. A. 7, 348; Sall. J. 5, 2: Graeciam, Cic. Or. 9, 20: omnia gravi timore, Flor. 1, 18, 12.—Hence, permixtus, a, um (perh. not permistus in class. Lat.), P. a.A.Promiscuous, confused: permixta caedes, Lucr. 3, 643; 5, 1313: mores,