părăsītus — Lewis & Short
părăsītus, i, m., = para/sitos, lit. one who eats with another; hence,
nos parasiti planius ... Quasi mures semper edimus alienum cibum, etc.,Plaut. Capt. 1, 1, 7; cf. id. Pers. 1, 3, 3; id. Stich. 2, 1, 42:
parasitorum in comoediis assentatio,Cic. Lael. 26, 98:
edaces parasiti,Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 173; Juv. 1, 139. —Comically, of a whip: ne ulmos parasitos faciat, that he will make his elm-twigs stick to me like parasites, i. e. give me a sound flogging, Plaut. Ep. 2, 3, 5.—The tutelar deity of parasites was Hercules, Plaut. Curc. 2, 3, 79.