Lewis & Short

Parsing inflected forms may not always work as expected. If the following does not give the correct word, try Latin Words or Perseus.

The word populicola could not be parsed. Trying a normal dictionary lookup:

No entries found. Showing closest matches:

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.

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.

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.

Pŏpŭlĭfŭgĭa, ōrum, v. Poplifugia.

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