Sugillo, sugillas, sugillâre: vel, vt quibusdam placet, suggillo, duplici g. Plin. To make blacke spots in the skinne with beating. Sugillare. Vlp. Liu.To scorne: to defame or detract: to reproue: to nip: to taunte.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
sūgillo (suggillo, oited ap. Victorin. p. 2465 P.), āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [etym. dub.; perh. akin with sugo], to beat black-andblue (mostly post-Aug.). I.Lit.: oculi ex ictu suffusi cruore et sugillati, Plin. 31, 9, 45, 100: athleta, qui numquam sugillatus est, Sen. Ep. 13, 2: oculos patri, perh. to knock out, Varr. ap. Non. 171, 13. — Part. perf. as subst.: sūgillāta, ōrum, n. (sc. loca), black-and-blue spots, bruises: allium sugillata aut liventia ad colorem reducit,
black-and-blue spots
, Plin. 20, 6, 23, 55: caseus recens cum melle sugillata emendat, id. 28, 9, 34, 132. — II.Trop.A.To flout, jeer, taunt, scoff at, insult, revile: viros sugillatos, repulsos, Liv. 4, 35, 10: Sulla repulsa praeturae sugillatus est, Val. Max. 7, 5, 5: crudelitatem alicujus, id. 3, 2, 1; 5, 3, 4: noli sugillare miserias, Petr. 128: pudorem, Dig. 2, 4, 10, 12: opinionem alicujus, ib. 44, 4, 4, 16; to annoy, Vulg. Luc. 18, 5.— B. = to beat into one, i. e. to suggest: verba alicui, Prud. stef. 10, 999.