Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/285

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  Mettre sur les dents. To toyle out, or to ouertoyle; to take too much of; to spend or spoyle, by putting to too much. Monstrer la dent. To girne, or grinne at; looke threateningly, or grimly on; fall into anger, grow into choller with. Parler à vn des grosses dents. To checke, taunt, reproue, take vp, chide throughly, speake roughly to; to talke to one as if he would eat him. Prendre le frein aux dents. To take the bit between his teeth; to resist authoritie, as a stubborne horse doth his rider; or, obstinately to follow his owne course, or go on with his owne proiect, whatsoeuer aduice, or commaund be giuen to the contrarie. Prendre la lune à belles dents. To performe impossibilities. Rire à grosses dents. To laugh onely from the teeth outward. Telle dent telle morsure: Prov. Looke Morsure. En vne herse bien dentée n'y faut nulles dents: Prov. A thing being once well done, what need additions? Tel a du pain lors qu'il n'a plus de dents: Prov. Some haue great plentie when they can take no pleasure in't. Vin trouble ne brise dents: Pro. Thicke wine breaks no teeth.

Dentade: f. A biting, or bit of the teeth; such a snatch, or pinch as a dog will sometimes giue on a sudden.

Dentaire: f. A kind of Sanicle; also, Toothwort, or clownes Lungwort.

Dental: m. as Denté. Dentateur: m. A Tooth-drawer.

Denté: m. The ruddie, and spotted Sea-Breame, or Goldenie; called so for the tushes that appeare out of his mouth; whereas the other fishes of that kind, either haue none, or none so appearing.

Denté: m. ée: f. Toothed, furnished with teeth; hauing many teeth; also, indented, notched, iagged. En vne herse bien dentée n'y faut nulles dents: Prov. Looke Dent. Dentée: f. as Dentade; or, a gash made, or blow giuen, by the tush of an angrie boare, &c.

Dentelé: m. A kind of mischieuous Dog-fish, that doth much hurt with his teeth.

Dentelé: m. ée: f. Toothed, toothie; full of iags resembling little teeth. Rouët dentelé. A cog-wheele.

Dentelet: m. A little tooth; (also, a repast, or meale: ¶Barrag.)

Dentelez: m. Foure muscles (two little, and two great ones) belonging to the breast.

Denteliz: m. Teeth; or, a tooth-like notching, or iagging, in Imagerie, &c.

Dentelle: f. Small edging (and indented) Bonelace, or Needleworke.

Denteleure: f. A tusking, or toothing, or tooth-like iaging, in Architecture.

Denticules: m. Tuskings, tooth-like iags, or caruing, on the chapters of pillers, or on any ledge, or edging.

Dentier: m. The part of an helmet that couers the teeth.

Dentir. To breed yong teeth.

Denudation: f. A denudation, or denuding; a laying, or leauing, bare.

Denué: m. ée: f. Denuded, bared; stript naked.

Denuer. To denude, bare, strip naked; leaue, or lay, bare.

Denys: m. as Denis.

Deoppilatif: m. iue: f. Deoppilatiue; opening, or vnstopping obstructions.

Depaïsé: m. ée: f. Driuen out of his countrey; also, growne courtlie, or, that hath left the countrey fashion.

Depaïser. To driue out of his countrey. Se depaïser. To grow courtlie, make it fine, leaue the countrey fashion. Depaïser le bestial. To change their soile, to send them out of the countrey they were bred in.

Depaistre. as Despaistre. De par. From; by the commaundement, or authoritie of. De-par vous. From you; on your part; in your name, roome, or place.

Deparceler. as S'accorder. To agree, or come to an agreement.

Deparler. To dispraise, blame, despise. (v.m.) Deparqué: m. ée: f. Disparked, disinclosed, layed open; also, broken, or got out, of a Parke, or inclosure.

Se Deparquer. To breake out of a Parke, or inclosed place; also, to goe out, or away from.

Depart: m. A departure, or going from; also, the parting of mettalls; and hence; Eau de depart. A kind of strong water, vsed in the parting of mettalls.

Departement: m. A parting, or departing; also, a diuiding; an alotting, parting, or appointing out vnto euerie one his part; and hence; a diuision, or partition of a countrey, as; Chaque Gouverneur est allé à son departement. vnto the place of gouernment allotted vnto him.

Departeur: m. A diuider, parter, distributer. Departeur d'or, & d'argent. One that parts mettalls, or seuers the one from another.

Departi: m. ie: f. Parted, gone, departed; also, diuided, distributed, disposed, sorted, or set into parts; also, refused, renounced, quitted, left, desisted from; also, parted, or seuered, as mettalls.

Departie: f. as Depart; A parting, or departure.

Departiment: m. A diuision, parting; squaring, or sorting out into seuerall parts, or for sundrie purposes.

Departir. To part, depart, or go from; also, to diuide, distribute, sort, or dispose into seuerall parts; also, to part, or seuer mettalls asunder. Se departir de, &c. To refuse, quit, renounce; also, to leaue, or desist from. Departir vn procez. When one Court is equally diuided, to require th' opinion of the Judges of another; that making vp one of two of the three, iudgement may bee thereon giuen.

Departissement. A parting, diuiding, distribution, partition; a sorting, or setting into parts; also, a leauing, departing, or going from.

Depassionner. To be angrie, or grow into choller.

Depecé. Dismembred; Looke Despecé. Depeinct: m. cte: f. Purtrayed, painted, liuely drawn, or described.

Depeindre. To draw, paint, purtray; describe liuely. Ie vous depeindray de vos couleurs. I will set you forth in your colours.

Depellé: m. ée: f. Pilled, skinned; blanched; flayed; pared.

Depenaillé. as Despenaillé.

Dependance: f. A dependancie; waiting, relying on; the hanging of one thing vpon another.