Desbourbé: m. ée: f. Drawne out of the mire.
Desbourber. To pull out of a slough, or muddie puddle; to draw out of the mire.
Desbourgeonner. To plucke, or nip off yong buds.
Desbourrer. To rid of bourre; Looke Bourre. Il commence à desbourrer. Said of a stranger that begins to speake tollerable French; as also of one that hauing beene kept vnder, and thereby liued barely, begins a little to flie out, and liues in a better fashion than he did before.
Desbours: m. A disbursement of money.
Desboursé: m. ée: f. Disbursed, laid out of a purse.
Desboursement: m. A disbursing; or laying out of money.
Desbouscher. Looke Desboucher. Desboutonné. Vnbuttoned; Looke Deboutonné. Desboutonnement: m. An vnbuttonning.
Desboutonner. To vnbutton, or vndoe a button; See Deboutonner. Desbraguetter. To vntie the codpeece point; Looke Debraguetter. Desbraillé: m. ée: f. Vnbraced, vnbuttonned, all open afore.
Desbrailler. To vnbrace, or vnbutton himselfe.
Desbranchi: m. ie: f. Lopped, or topped; whose branches are cut, or pulled off.
Desbranchir. To top, or lop the boughes; to cut, or pluck off, the branches of a tree.
Desbraquer. To vnplant, or dismount artillerie; to wry, or disappoint the leuell thereof.
Desbride: f. An eare-wire; or, the wire that stayes the flaps, or head-peece, of a French-hood.
Desbridé: m. ée: f. Vnbridled.
Desbrider. To vnbridle.
Desbrigandiner. To depriue of a Brigandine; to rip, vndoe, take, pull, or cut, off a Brigandine.
Desbris. as Debris. Desbrisé: m. ée: f. Riuen, clouen, torne, burst, or split asunder.
Desbrisement. A riuing, cleauing, bursting, or splitting asunder.
Desbriser. se desbriser. To riue, or cleaue asunder, as boords that gape; See Desbriser. Desbrodequiné: m. ée: f. Whose buskins are drawn, or pulled off.
Desbrodequiner. To vnbuskin; to plucke, or draw, off buskins.
Desbrouillant. Cleering; disintangling.
Desbrouillé: m. ée: f. Disintangled, vnpestered; cleered.
Desbrouillement: m. A disintangling; a cleering.
Desbrouiller. To disintangle; rid from incombrance, wind out of trouble; also, to cleere, manifest, lighten, expell the mist of.
Desbuissonné: m. ée: f. Roused, forced, or driuen from a couert, or thicket.
Desbuissonner. To rouse, raise, driue, or force, out of a couert, or thicket.
Desbusqué: m. ée: f. Parted, flit, gone roundly from; scudded away.
Desbusquer. To part, or depart, flit, stirre, goe roundly from, to scud away; to get him gone.
Desbuté: m. ée: f. Repelled, thrust backe; driuen or put from his marke; pretences, appointments.
Desbuter. To repell, thrust back, driue from his pretence, or place; to put from the marke he was, or aimed, at; to disappoint.
Descaché: m. ée: f. Discouered, vncouered, vnhidden, reuexled , opened, brought to light.
Descacher. To vncouer, disclose, open, reueale, discouer.
Descacheté: m. ée: f. Vnsealed, or, whose seal is burst ope.
Descacheter lettres. To vnseale, or breake open, letters.
Descaillé: m. ée: f. Vncurded, resolued. Se Descailler. To resolue, vncurd, fall asunder.
Descalengé: m. ée: f. Vnarrested, vnapprehended, non inuentus; also, discharged; or redeliuered after a seisure.
Descampé: m. ée: f. Discamped.
Descampement: m. A discamping; a raising, or a remouing of; a departing from, the camp.
Descamper. To discamp; to raise, or to remoue a campe; to depart from the campe.
Descapité: m. ée: f. Decapitated, beheaded.
Descapiter. To decapitate, behead, strike off the head.
Descapuchonné: m. ée: f. Vnhooded, vncowled; vncouered, bare headed.
Descapuchonner. To vnhood, vncowle, vncouer. Desceinct: m. cte: f. Vngirt, without a girdle.
Desceindre. To vngird, vnloosse, or vndoe a girdle. Se desceindre, & iecter sa ceincture à terre. A ceremonie, by which (being done in Court) a debtor giues vnto his creditors the possession of his whole estate; A vassall also when he prepares himselfe to do his homage, or fealtie, must put off his girdle, and lay by the sword, or other weapon which he vsually weares.
Desceler. To discover, disclose, detect, bewray.
Descendant. les descendans de. The progenie, or ofspring of.
Descendant. Descending; alighting; going downwards. Qui va en descendant. Steepe, declining, enclined, bowing, bending, or banging downewards.
Descendement. as Descente; Or, a descending, alighting; a going, falling, lighting downe; also, a casting, taking, laying downe. Descendre. To descend, goe downe, come from, alight, light off, or downe; also, to cast, bring, take, or lay down; to fetch from a higher place vnto a lower.
Descendu: m. uë: f. Descended, deriued, come from; also, cast, brought, let, laied, taken downe; also, put ouer, as the meat a Hawke hath eaten.
Descenduë: f. A Discent, race, progenie, ofspring, linage.
Descenglé: m. ée: f. Vngirded, or vngirthed.
Descengler. To vngird, or vngirth.
Descensoire: com. Descensiue, descending; of power, or propertie to descend.
Descente: f. A descent; fall; steepe side of a hill, &c; also, a descending, declining, or going downe.
Desceptré: m. ée: f. Deposed, vnkinged, depriued of a (royall, or kinglie) Scepter.
Desceptrer. To depose, or put from, to bereaue, or depriue of, a (kinglie) Scepter.
Desceu. à mon desceu. Vnwitting to me, without my knowledge.
Deschainé: m. ée: f. Vnchained; vnfettered; loossed, or deliuered from chaines; fetters; bondage. C'est vn diable deschainé. He is a verie furie, an incarnate diuell; or limme of the diuell; a man would thinke that hell's broke loosse where he is.
Deschainer. To vnchaine; to loosse out of chaines; to deliuer from slauish captiuitie.
Deschalandé: m. ée: f. Out of trade, without custome, or customers.
Deschalander. To driue away customers; or depriue of custome.
Deschambré: m. ée: f. Seperated, scattered, parted, as chamber-fellowes; also, driuen, roused, or thrust out