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Pŏplĭfŭgĭa (Pŏpŭ-), ōrum, n. [1. populus-fugio], a festival in memory of the people’s flight to the rescue of the Latins, celebrated on the nones of July, POPLIF. NP., Calend. Maff. ap. Inscr. Orell. 2, p. 394; cf. Varr. L. L. 6, 3, § 18; Piso ap. Macr. S. 3, 2.

pōpŭlĭfer, ĕra, ĕrum, adj. [2. populusfero], poplar-bearing (poet.): Padus, whose banks abound with poplars, Ov. Am. 2, 17, 32: Spercheos, id. M. 1, 579.

Pŏpŭlĭfŭgĭa, ōrum, v. Poplifugia.

pŏpŭliscītum, i, n., or better written separately, pŏpŭli scītum, a decree of the people: Athenienses nihil nisi populi scitis ac decretis agebant, Cic. Rep. 1, 27, 43; id. Opt. Gen. 7, 19: populiscito in patriam restitutus est, Nep. Arist. 1, 5: scitum populi, Liv. 45, 25.

* pŏpŭlĭto, āre, v. freq. a. [populor], to lay waste, to plunder: fructus agrorum, Dig. 49, 1, 21 fin. (al. popularentur).