Verno, vernas, vernâre. Mart. To spring as hearbes do: to butgen. Also to sing cheerefully as birdes doe.Quum vernant & exundant nouis fœtibus apes. Col. WhÊ bees beginne to breede and bring forth newe swarmes.Quum tibi vernarent dubia lanugine malæ. Mart. When the yong mosie haire began first to spring on thy chinne.Ager vernans. Mar. A sield beginning to spring with grasse and flowers.Arbores vernantes. Plin. Trees beginning to burgen.Humus vernat. Ou. The ground waxeth grene with grasse.Nemus vernat. Sen. Syluæ vernantes. Sen. Cœlum vernans Pli.A saire pleasant weather. Anguis vernar. Plin. A snake is of coulour greene. Vernant auiculæ. Plau. Birds begin to sing in the spring.Auis vernat indocili gutture. Oui.
Vernus, Adiect. Of the spring time. vt Verni flores. Plini. flowers in the spring time.Aequinoctium vernum. Plin. Aura verna.Ouid. Flos vernus. Tibul. Rosa verna. Propert. Sol vernus, Ouid.Species verna diei. Lucre. The beautie of the spring time.Tempus vernum. Hor. The spring.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
verno, āre, v. n. [ver], to appear like spring, to flourish, be verdant; to spring, bloom, grow young, renew itself, etc. (poet. and in post-Aug. prose; syn. vireo). I.Lit.: humus, Ov. M. 7, 284: arbores fruticesque, Plin. 22, 22, 46, 95: caelum, id. 7, 2, 2, 26: caelum bis floribus, Flor. 1, 16, 3: in Italiā aër semper quodammodo vernat vel auctumnat, Plin. 2, 50, 51, 136: silva vernat, Sen. Herc. Oet. 380: vernantia lilia,