Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Impluvium

Impluvium , noun

[Latin, from impluere to rain into; pref. im- in + pluere to rain.]

(Architecture) In Roman dwellings, a cistern or tank, set in the atrium or peristyle to receive the water from the roof, by means of the compluvium; generally made ornamental with flowers and works of art around its brim.