Rotundo, rotundas, rotundâre. Ci. To make round.Rotundare summã. Hor. To make the counte perfit and ful.Rotundare caput.To grow with a rosid hed as popie doth.
Rotundus, Adiect Pli. Round: wel compact or fashioned.Forma rotunda. Ci, Baccæ rotundiores. Hor. Lances rotundæ. Hor. Globosæ & rotundæ stellæ.Cic.Quadratum & Rotundum, contraria.Cic.Verborum apta, & quasi rotunda constructio. C. An apt and handsome compacting of words: in a stile.Rorundus orator, per translationem: id est elegans & compositus.Cic.An oratour whose stile is handsome and wel compact without superfluitie of words.Oe rotundo loqui. Hor. To speake persitly wel and readily: to expresse much in few wordes.Clausulæ rorundæ. Qui. Ful and persic clauses of sentences falling round.Celeri magis ac rotunda vsi distributione, qumvera. Qui. Vsing a distribution that runneth roundly and pleasãtlie rather than one that is true.Volubilis & rotundus Deus.Rotundus ambitus.Cic. Rotundum cælum. Ci.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
rŏtundo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [rotundus], to make round, to round off, round (syn. torno). I.Lit. (class.): cum similem universitatis naturae efficere vellet, ad volubilitatem rotundavit, Cic. Univ. 10: tignum ad circinum, Vitr. 10, 11, 1: vasculum in modum papillae, App. M. 11, p. 262, 9: orbem solis (with curvare aequaliter), Vell. 2, 59, 6: se (flamma), Mel. 1, 18, 4.—Mid.: herbae in caulem rotundantur, Plin. 21, 17, 66, 106.—II.Trop., of style, etc., to round off, elaborate, (very rare): elegos acutos ac rotundatos hendecasyllabos elucubrare, rounded, i. e. smooth, polished, Sid. Ep. 8, 4. —Of a sum of money, to make up, complete (cf. corrotundo): mille talenta rotundentur, Hor. Ep. 1, 6, 34.
rŏtundus (rŭt-), a, um, adj. [rota], wheel-shaped, i. e. round, circular, spherical, rotund (very freq. and class.; cf. teres). I.Lit.: cur ea, quae fuerint juxtim quadrata, procul sint Visa rotunda, Lucr. 4, 502; cf. Cic. Fin. 2, 12, 36: stellae globosae et rotundae, id. Rep. 6, 15, 15: mundum rotundum esse volunt, id. N. D. 1, 10, 24.— Comp.: mundum ita tornavit, ut nihil effici possit rotundius, Cic. Univ. 6; so, bacae, Hor. Epod. 8, 13; cf.: capita rotundiora ... rotundissima, Cels. 8, 1 fin.: locus infimus in rotundo, Cic. Tusc. 5, 24, 69: togae,
hanging evenly all round
, Quint. 11, 3, 139.— Prov.: diruit, aedificat, mutat quadrata rotundis, i. e.
turns every thing upside down
, Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 100.—II.Trop., round, rounded.A. In gen.: sapiens Fortis et in se ipse totus, teres atque rotundus, Hor. S. 2, 7, 86: illa rotunda et undique circumcisa, Quint. 8, 5, 27.—B. In partic., of speech (opp. rough, unpolished), round, well turned, smooth, polished, elegant (in Cic. with quasi or ut ita dicam added; but v. infra, adv. b.): erat verborum et delectus elegans et apta et quasi rotunda constructio, Cic. Brut. 78, 272; cf.: Thucydides praefractior nec satis, ut ita dicam, rotundus, id. Or. 13, 40: Graiis dedit ore rotundo Musa loqui, Hor. A. P. 323; celeris ac rotunda distributio, Quint. 3, 4, 16: rotunda volubilisque sententia, Gell. 11, 13, 4: rotundi numeri (with brevis), id. 17, 20, 4: verba, id. 16, 1, 1.—Hence, adv.: rŏtun-dē. a. (Acc. to I.) Roundly: ut in orbem quam rotundissime formetur, Col. Arb. 5, 2.— b. (Acc. to II.) Roundly, smoothly, elegantly: a te quidem apte ac rotunde, Cic. Fin. 4, 3, 7.