Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/290

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Desbarbouiller. To cleanse, make cleane, vnspot, or cleere from spots.

Desbardé: m. ée: f. Vnladen, as a ship; disarmed, as a great horse; vnsadled, as an Asse.

Desbarder. To vnload a ship, or boat; to vnheape, vnburthen, disburthen; also, to vnbarbe, or disarme a horse of seruice; to vnsadle a Moyle, or Asse.

Desbardeur: m. A Lyter-man, or Lighter-man; a Porter that vses to vnload ships, or carrie wares out of ships &c.

Desbarger. c'est, abbatre la terre du chevalier de costé, & d'autre qui peut cheoir sur les plantes de Vigne.

Desbarqué: m. ée: f. Disimbarked, put a land, set on shore.

Desbarquer. To disimbarke, put a land, set on shore.

Desbarré: m. ée: f. Vnbarred, vnboulted.

Desbarrer. To vnbar, vnboult; open.

Desbasté: m. ée: f. Vnsadled; or, whose packesadle is taken off.

Desbaster vn asne. To vnsadle an Asse; to take off his packesadle.

Desbasti: m. ie: f. Pulled downe, as a building.

Desbastiment: m. A pulling downe of buildings.

Desbastir. To ruine, vnbuild, take downe, or pull downe a building.

Desbastonné: m. ée: f. Disarmed; depriued of weapons.

Desbastonner. To disarme, or depriue of weapons.

Desbauche: f. Incontinencie, dissolutenesse, lewdnesse, riot, vnrulinesse, disorder.

Desbauché: m. ée: f. Deboshed, lewd, incontinent, vngracious, dissolute, naught; vnthriftie, riotous, vnrulie, disordered; also, depraued, misled, ill-aduised, or led by ill aduice.

Desbauchment: m. A deboshement; a corrupting, marring, deprauing, viciating; seducing, misleading.

Desbaucher. To debosh; marre, corrupt, spoyle, viciate; seduce, mislead; make lewd, bring to disorder, draw from goodnesse. Il se desbauche. He roames, digresses, flies out, goes from the purpose, runs altogether from the matter.

Desbaudi: m. ie: f. Made sad, or ashamed.

Desbaudir. To make sad, or ashamed; (old words.)

Desbaugé: m. ée: f. Vnsloughed; raised (as a wild swine) out of the durt wherein he lay wallowing.

Desbauger vn sanglier. To raise, or to rouse a wild boare from the place he lies, or wallows in; to vnslough him.

Desbellé: m. ée: f. Subdued, vanquished, ouercome by warre, &c.

Desbeller. To subdue, vanquish, ouercome, in warre.

Desbaux: m. A generall deboshement, disorder, dissolutenesse.

Desbendade: f. as Debendade; An vnbending. À la desbendade. Swiftly, violently, furiously, like an arrow out of a bow; also, disorderly.

Desbender. To vnbend, loossen; disband; vnbind.

Desberger. as Desbarger. Desbifé. as Debiffé. Desbifement: m. A rasing, or scraping out; also, decay, pining, languor, sorie looking, low taking, poore estate of bodie; also, a rending, or a riuing asunder.

Desblaver. To reape corne; to despoile, or vnfurnish of corne; to gather a crop of corne.

Desblayé: m. Disincumbred, vnpestered; cleere of, rid from.

Desblayer. To vnpester, disincumber, cleere; take a-*

*way lets, remoue impediments.

Desblée: f. Hinderance, dammage, disaduantage by scarcitie; also, corne; or a crop of corne; also, a stacke, or halfe-thraue, of corne.

Desbléer. as Desblayer. Desbleure. la desb: ou les desbleures. Hay, or stuble, whether it be made in cockes, or lie vnmade vp on the ground.

Desbleyer. as Desblayer. Desblouqué: m. ée: f. Vnblocked; also, vnbuckled.

Desblouquer. To vnblocke, or open the (blockt-vp) passages of; also, to vnbuckle.

Desböeté: m. ée: f. Vnboxed, taken out of a box; put out of ioint.

Desböeter. To vnbox, or take out of a box; also, to put out of ioynt; (in which sence it is vsed most.)

Desböeture. A putting out of ioynt.

Desboire: m. Looke Deboire. Desboisté: m. ée: f. Vnboxed; out of it right box; or, as Desböeté. Desboistement. The being out of ioynt.

Desboité. as Desboisté. Desboiter. To vnbox, vnioynt, take out of a box; put out of ioynt.

Desbondé: m. ée: f. Vnbunged, opened, vnstopped.

Desbonder. To vnbung, open, vnstop; to take out the bung, pull out the stople of. Se desbonder. To gush, rush, or breake strongly, (as water thats let) out of a spowt, sluce, or bung-*hole.

Desbondonner. as Desbonder. Desbord: m. as Desbordement. Desbordé: m. ée: f. Ouerflowne or broken (as water) out of it bankes, or bounds; also, excessiue, profuse, disordered.

Desbordement: m. An ouerflowing, surrounding, or breaking out, as of waters; also, riot, excesse, disorder, superfluitie, profusion.

Se Desborder. To ouerflow, surround, runne ouer his bankes, breake out of his bounds; exceed rule, order, measure.

Desborné: m. ée: f. Vnbounded; whose bounds are laid open. Desbornement: m. An vnbounding, or laying open of bounds.

Desborner. To vnbound, lay open the bounds; plucke vp, or pull downe the meeres of.

Desbort. as Desbordement. Desbossué: m. ée: f. Vnbunched; smoothed, planed, plained, leuelled, fallen, made flat, or without bunches.

Desbossuër. To vnbunch, plane, leuell, make flat, plaine, without bunches, or bunching.

Desbouché: m. ée: f. Opened, vnstopped; also, disparked, disinclosed; also, vnmuffled, vnmasked, whose mouth is vncouered. Vn cheval desbouché. Ill-mouthed, of an vnsetled mouth; also, not fitted by his bit.

Desbouchement: m. An vnstopping; a disparking, an opening of inclosures.

Desboucher. To vnstop, open, broach; to disparke, to breake downe hedges, or inclosures; also, to vnmuffle, vnmaske, vncouer the mouth.

Desbouclé: m. ée: f. Vnbuckled, loosse, vnfastened.

Desboucler. To vnbuckle, to open, to looße.
  Desboucler vne ville. To raise a siege, or free it from those that had blocked it vp.