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călĕ-făcĭo, or contr. calfăcĭo (as calidus = caldus, calidarius = caldarius, etc.), fēci, factum, 3, v. a. (in the time of Quint. the contracted form seems to have been the prevailing one, v. Quint. 1, 6, 21; also Charis. p. 220 P. gives as pass. calfio. In the poets usage varies according to the demands of the verse; e. g., cālfācìt, Ov. F. 4, 698; cālfăcienda, id. A. A. 2, 214; cālfācti, id. Ib. 48, and călĕfēcit, Lucr. 6, 687; călēfacta, Verg. A. 12, 66; 12, 269 al. In prose writers—e. g. Quint. 5, 10, 58—the best MSS. vary between the two forms.
Imperat. calface, Cic. Fam. 16, 18, 2.
Pass. regularly calefio; once by a solecism calefacientur, Vitr. 5, 10; cf. concalefaciuntur, id. 4, 7) [caleo-facio].
călĕfactābĭlis, e, adj. [calefacio], that can be warmed, made hot: ignis, Boëth. ap. Aristot. Interpr. p. 279; cf. id. ib. p. 450.
călĕfactĭo, ōnis, f. [calefacio], a warming, heating (post-Aug.): balnei publici, Dig. 50, 4, 18, § 4.
In plur.: calefactiones thermarum, Dig. 50, 4, 1, § 2.
călĕfacto, āre, v. freq. act. [id.], to make warm, to warm, heat (very rare; not in Cic.).
călĕfactōrĭus, a, um, adj. [calefacio], having a warming or heating power, Plin. Val. 1, 38; Theod. Prisc. de Diaeta, 10.
1. călĕfactus or calfactus, a, um, Part., v. calefacio.
2. călĕfactus (calfac-), ūs, m. [calefacio], a warming, heating (post-Aug. and rare): faucium tumorem calfactu obiter fovere, Plin. 29, 3, 11, § 48; Lact. Opif. Dei, 14, 5.
călĕfīo, fĭĕri, v. calefacio.