the acquaintance of; also, to renounce, or forgoe all acquaintance with.
Desaccommodé: m. ée: f. Disaccommodated.
Desaccommoder. To disaccommodate.
Desaccord: m. A iarre, discord, vntuneablenesse; disagreement, contention, difference.
Desaccordance: f. A discordance, or disaccording; a squaring, iarring, differing, variance, disagreeing.
Desaccordant. Discordant; squaring, iarring, disagreeing, discrepant, repugnant vnto.
Desaccordé. Discordant, iarring, out of tune; also, disaccorded.
Desaccorder. To discord, or disaccord; to iarre, differ, disagree, dissent, square, be repugnant.
Desaccostable: com. Vnaccoastable, vnapproachable; vncompanable, vnsociable.
Desaccouplé: m. ée: f. Vncoupled; vnyoaked.
Desaccoupler. To vncouple; vnyoke; disioyne.
Desaccoustumance: f. A disuse, vnwontednesse, vnaccustomednesse; discontinuance; a leauing of a fashion, a forgoing of a custome.
Desaccoustumé. Disaccustomed, left off, disused, giuen ouer, worne out of vse, growne out of fashion.
Desaccoustumer. To disaccustome; disuse, bring out of vse; to discontinue the custome, forgoe the fashion of.
Desaccroché: m. ée: f. Vnhoked.
Desaccrocher. To vnhooke.
Desacré: m. eé: f. Vnhallowed, prophaned.
Desacrer. To prophane, to vnhallow.
Disadjusté: m. ée: f. Disadiusted; disapted; disordered; made vneuen, or vnsteaddie.
Desadjuster. To disadiust, vnsettle, disorder, disapt, make vneuen, or vnsteaddie.
Desadmonesté: m. ée: f. Disadmonished, or dissuaded; warned from, or to the contrarie of.
Desadmonester. To disadmonish, or dissuade.
Desadvenant. A portion of an inheritance left a vassall, but not sufficient for the homage due vnto the Lord.
Desadventageusement. Disaduantagiously.
Desadventure: f. Misfortune, misaduenture.
Desadvest: m. A Disseisin, dispossession, disaduesture, disinheriting.
Desadvestir. To disseise, disaduest, dispossesse, disinherite.
Desadveu. A disclaime, disaduowing, renouncing; also, a thing done at vnawares, or against the will.
Desadvisé: m. ée: f. Vnaduised, inconsiderate, foolish, rash.
Desadvoüé: m. ée: f. Disaduowed, disclaimed from.
Desadvoüement: m. A disaduowing, or disclaiming from.
Desadvoüer. To disaduow, disclaime, refuse, renounce.
Desaffamé: m. ée: f. Whose hunger is slaked, or satisfied.
Desaffamer. To slake, or satisfie the hunger of.
Desaffleuré: m. ée: f. Deflowred; or, whose flourishing is hindered.
Desaffleurer. To deflower, or vnflower; to plucke the flowers from; to hinder the flowring, or flourishing of.
Desaffublé: m. ée: f. Vnmuffled, vnhooded, vnhoodwinked.
Desaffubler. To vnmuffle, vnhood, vnhoodwinke; vncouer.
Il se disaffubla. He cast open his gowne, or cassocke, wherewith he had couered his face.
Desagé: m. ée: f. Vnder age, not of full age, not yet of yeares; also, decrepit, verie old, or so old, as hee hath need of tending.
Desagencé: m. ée: f. Disadapted, disadiusted, disordered.
Desagencement: m. A disadapting, disadiusting, disordering.
Desagencer. To disadapt, disadiust, disaccommodate, disproportion, disorder; to set out of frame, put out of fashion, bring out of the right, into a wrong, place.
Desagenouillé: m. ée: f. Risen, or got vp from kneeling.
Se Desagenouiller. To arise, or get vp from kneeling.
Desagrafé: m. ée: f. Vnclasped, vngrapled, vnhasped.
Desagrafer. To vnclaspe, vngraple, vnhaspe.
Desagreable: com. Disagreeable, vnacceptable, vnpleasing.
Desajancer. as Desagencer. Desaigri: m. ie: f. Sweetned; appeased.
Desaigrir. To sweeten, or vnsharpen, to allay the sowernesse of; also, to assuage, mitigate, pacifie, appease.
Desaiguilleter. To vntrusse, or vndoe points; also, to take the points from, or depriue of points.
Desaimé: m. ée: f. Vnloued; fallen into the dislike of.
Desaimer. To vnloue; desist from louing; loath what before was loued; fall into dislike, or disgust of.
Desairer. To vnayrie; or, spoyle, and destroy an ayrie of Hawkes &c.
Desaise: f. A Sicknesse, a disease, a being ill at ease.
Desaisé: m. ée: f. Diseased, sicke, out of temper, ill at ease.
Desaisine. Looke Dessaisine. Desalé: m. ée: f. Taught wit by experience, purged of the foole, that hath seene the Lyons.
Desalier. as Deslier; To vnbind. Desallé. as Desalé. Desalteré: m. ée: f. Whose thirst is quenched, slaked, allayed.
Desalterer. To quench, allay, slake thirst.
Desamassé: m. ée: f. Vnheaped, vnpiled.
Desamasser. To vnheape, vnpile; pull downe a heape; consume things heaped.
Desancré. Weighed, as an anker; let goe, or loossed, as a hold.
Desancrer. To weigh anker, and be gone; also, to loosse ones hold.
Desangé: m. ée: f. Extirpated; the race whereof is destroyed.
Desanger. as Desenger; To extirpate, or destroy the race of. Desanimé: m. ée: f. Depriued of spirit, or life.
Desanimer. To depriue of life, or spirit,
Desantourat. Deflowred, as a virgine that hath leachered: ¶Langued. Desapareillé: m. ée: f. Disordered, ruffled, made vnreadie.
Dsapareiller. To ruffle, disorder, make vnreadie, put out of tune, or trim.
Desapareilleur: m. An vndresser; a maker vnreadie; a disorderer.
Desaparié: m. ée: f. Vnmatched, vnpaired, vncoupled; whose match, mate, or companion is taken from him.