Lewis & Short

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dēdŏlentĭa, ae, f., the abandonment of grief, ceasing to lament, ἀπαλγησία, Vet. Gloss.

dē-dŏlĕo, ui, 2, v. n., to give over grieving, grieve no more (rare), Ov. F. 3, 480; id. R. Am. 294.

dē-dŏlo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a., to hew away, to hew smooth, to hew: partes putres pedamentorum, Col. 4, 26, 1: ridicas, id. 11, 2, 12: arborem, Plin. 16, 39, 74, § 188: vasculum crystallo dedolatum, smoothed, inlaid, App. M. 6, p. 178: ossa fracta fabrili manu, Mart. 11, 84.
Jocosely: senem Exossabo dein dedolabo assulatim viscera, Plaut. Men. 5, 2, 106.
Hence, in familiar lang., to cudgel soundly: fustium quoque crebris ictibus dedolabar, App. M. 7, p. 195; and in an obscene sense, id. ib. 9, p. 220, 30.