Pernego, pernegas, pen. cor. pernegâre. Tere. To denie stiffely and vtterly.Etiam fatetur de hospite? TE. imo pernegat. Plaut.Traditum se aliquid pernegare.Cic. Pernegâtur, Impersonale, Cicero, Itaque illo tempore ac primo istius aduentu pernegatur.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
per-nĕgo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a.I.To deny altogether; to deny steadily, stoutly, or flatly: Negas? Ly. Pernego immo, Plaut. Aul. 4, 10, 34: pernegabo atque obdurabo, id. As. 2, 2, 56: saepe appellati, pernegaverunt, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 41, 106: pyxidem traditam pernegaret, id. Cael. 27, 65; Tib. 1, 6, 8.—II.To refuse or decline altogether (postAug.): Catoni populus Romanus praeturam negavit, consulatum pernegavit, Sen. Ben. 5, 17, 2; Mart. 4, 82, 5.