Polypus, fœmina. Plin. Polypus. Celsus. A disense in the nose called Noli me tangere, breeding a peece of flesh that oftentimes stiffeleth one, and stoppeth the winde.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
pōlpŭs, i, m. (fem., Lucil. ap. Non. 220, 4), = polu/pous (many-footed; Dor. and Æol. pwlu/pos), a polypus.I.An aquatic animal, sea-polypus: Sepia octopodia, Linn.: piscis polypus, Plaut. Rud. 4, 3, 71; Plin. 9, 12, 14, 40; 9, 19, 35, 71 al. (Jahn, polybi); Lucil. l. l.; Enn. ap. App. Mag. p. 299 (Heduph. v. 10 Vahl.); Ov. M. 4, 366; id. Hal. 31 (with the o long).—Transf., of rapacious men, Plaut. Aul. 2, 2, 21.—II.A polypus in the nose, Cels. 6, 8, 2; 6, 7, 10; Plin. 24, 16, 92, 146; Hor. S. 1, 3, 40; id. Epod. 12, 5 (with the o long).