Remetior, remetîris, pe. pr. remensus sum, remetíri. Plin. iun.To measure againe: to go ouer againe.Astra seruata remctior.Virg.Iter remensus.Stat.Comming backe the same way againe.Mari remenso. Virgil. Hauing passed oner the sea backe againe.Remetiri pelagus. Vir. To passe ouer a sea againe. Facta ac dicta mea noctu remetion.Senec.In the night I remÊber & constder againe al that I haue done or spoken. Frumentum pecuoia remetiamur. Quint. To pay money for the corne.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
rĕ-mētĭor, mensus, 4, v. dep. a., to measure or mete again, measure or mete back (poet. and in post-Aug. prose). I.Lit.: iter retro remensumst, Lucr. 2, 516: si modo rite memor servata remetior astra, Verg. A. 5, 25: frumentum pecuniā remetiri, to measure back with money, i. e. to pay for with an equal measure of money, Quint. Decl. 12, 19 fin.—In pass. sense: in quā mensurā mensi fueritis, remetietur, Vulg. Matt. 7, 2; id. Marc. 4, 24.—B.Transf.1.To measure back, i. e. to go, pass, or travel over again: iter, Stat. Th. 3, 324: stadia, Plin. 2, 71, 73, 181.— In pass. sense: pelagoque remenso, Improvisi aderunt, Verg. A. 2, 181: remenso mari, id. ib. 3, 143.—2. In gen., to void or discharge back again: ille fide summā testae sua vina remensus, Reddidit oenophori pondera plena sui, Mart. 6, 89, 5: vinum omne vomitu, Sen. Ep. 95, 21; cf. id. Prov. 3, 13.— II.Trop., to go over in one's mind; to think over, reflect upon; to tell again, repeat: totum diem mecum scrutor, facta ac dicta mea remetior, Sen. Ira, 3, 36: fabulam, App. M. 1, p. 104, 7; 2, p. 123, 35.— 2. (Acc. to I. B. 1.) To measure or pass over again: transmissum discrimen convalescendo remetiri, to remeasure, in recovering, the danger surmounted (i. e. to be continually advancing in recovery), Plin. Ep. 8, 11, 2.