Ramôsus, pen. prod. Adiectiuum. Plin. Full of boughes: that hath many boughs or branches.Arbor ramosa. Luc. Cornua ramosa cerui. Vir. Stipes ramosus.Ouid.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
rāmōsus, a, um, adj. [ramus], full of boughs, having many branches, branching, branchy.I.Lit.: arbor, Lucr. 5, 1096: ilex, Ov. M. 8, 237; cf.: domus Silvani, Prop. 4 (5), 4, 5: stipes, Ov. F. 3, 751. — Comp.: lappago, Plin. 26, 10, 65, 102. — Sup., Tert. Apol. 35.—II.Transf., branching: cornua cervi, Verg. E. 7, 30: corpora, Lucr. 2, 446; Claud. Cons. Stil. 3, 291: radices, Plin. 21, 15, 52, 89.— Comp.: folium, Plin. 21, 10, 32, 58. — Sup.: curalium, Plin. 32, 2, 11, 22.—Poet., of the clouds, branchy, forked, Lucr. 6, 133.—Of the Lernæan hydra, from whose trunk young serpents grew out like branches, Ov. M. 9, 73: vitae nescius error diducit mentes ramosa in compita, into many devious ways, Pers. 5, 35.