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oculos suffusa nitentes, in which case suffusa is causative middle, and oculos the direct acc. Madvig, loc. cit., includes fundi with its compounds among reflexive verbs. Geri. Lucr., i. 442. Aut erit ut possint in eo res esse gerique. Lucr., i. 472. Nec locus ac spatium, res in quo quaeque geruntur. Gigni. Lucr., iii. 173. Et in terra mentis qui gignitur aestus. And on the ground the turmoil of mind that arises. (Monro.) Cic., Lael. 21. Cavendum vero … ex quibus jurgia, maledicta, contumeliae gignuntur. Whence arise strife, evil-speaking, and insolence. Lewis and Short, s.v., practically concede this use of gigni: they write as follows: “In pass. to be born, to spring, arise, proceed.” Lucr., iii. 337. Praeterea corpus per se nec gignitur unquam. Nothing, moreover, ever comes into existence of its own accord. Indui. Virg., Aen. ii. 392. Androgei galeam clipeique insigne decorum Induitur. He proceeds to put on the helmet and the handsome and conspicuous shield of Androgeos. (Lee and Lonsdale.) Ter., Eun. iv. 4, 40. Et eamst [sc. vestem] indutus. (Reading varies between ea and eam.) Cf. induitur faciem Dianae; and Cic., De Orat. 3, 32, 127 Aen. ii. 275. Qui redit exuvias indutus Achilli, Vel Danaum Phrygios jaculatus puppibus ignis. Who [sc. Hector] returns, having donned the spoils of Achilles, &c. Jaci. Trans-jici, traici. Liv., xxi. 29. Dum elephanti trajiciuntur. (Many of the elephants on this occasion got rid of their drivers and swam the Rhone.) Lewis and Short, s.v., give many instances parallel, but they mark the words passive. The locution trajectus pedes seems to come under the same head.