Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/294

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Descouronner. To vncrowne; depriue of a crowne; dispossesse of a diadem.

Descourtoisie: f. Discourtesie, want of courtesie; Looke Discourtoisie. Descouseur: m. A ripper, vnsower; vndooer of.

Descousu: m. uë: f. Ripped, vnsowed; vndone. Estre tout descousu (apres la colere.) To be as calme as a (standing) clocke; to haue no mettall, spirit, vigor in him; to be as good as nobodie.

Descousure: f. A ripping, vnsowing, vndoing of.

Descouvert: m. erte: f. Discouered; vncouered; detected, disclosed; exposed vnto the worlds view; open, euident, manifest, apparant, without any cloke, pretext, or colour; also, descried, or discerned a farre off. À descouvert. Manifestly, openly, euidently, apparantly, in the view of all men, abroad in the ayer, without doores. Il a descouvert le pasté. Looke Pasté. Descouverte: f. A discouerie, detection, disclosure, denudation; a descrying, discerning, perceiuing, or spying out of.

Descouvrement: m. A discouering, vncouering, detecting, disclosing; a descrying, discerning, or perceiuing a farre off.

Descouvreur: m. A discouerer; detector, discloser; a scout, an espiall.

Descouvrir. To discouer; to vncouer, vnhill, denude, lay naked, make bare; to disclose, detect, manifest, open, lay open, expose vnto the worlds view; also, to descrie, discerne, perceiue a farre off. Descouvrir la meiche. To vent (and auoid) a deadlie mischiefe; Looke Meiche. Descouvrir Sainct Pierre pour couvrir Sainct Paul. To rob, or borrow of, one, therewith to inrich, or pay, another.

Descrassé: m. ée: f. Cleansed, made cleane, cleered, of grease, or greasinesse; rid from filthie, or slouenlie ordure; the thicke-growne durt whereof is gotten out.

Descrasser. To cleanse, make cleane, wipe away greasie filth, get out thicke-growne durt, rid from slouenlie ordure.

Descri. as Descrit. Descrié: m. eé: f. Cried downe, called in; as naughtie, or false, money; also, discredited, whose credit is broken, or crackt; openly defamed, in disgrace with the publicke.

Descriement: m. A crying downe, or calling in; also, an open discrediting, publicke disgracing, or disparaging.

Descrier. To crie downe, or call in, vncurrent, or naughtie coine; also, publickly to discredit, disparage, disgrace; to publish the faults, divulge the imperfections, blaze the wants, proclaime the defects, of. On le descrie comme la vieille monnoye. He hath a verie bad report among the people; his credit is wholly crackt, fame blemished, reputation lost.

Descript: m. ipte: f. Described, set downe, or declared.

Description: f. A description.

Descrire. To describe; set downe, or declare.

Descrit de monnoye: m. The calling in of money.

Descroché: m. ée: f. Vnhooked, loossed, vndone. Ancre leuée, & descrochée. Weighed, pulled vp.

Descrocher. To vnhooke, to vndoe, or loossen a hooke; to shake, or pull a thing off a hooke.

Descrocheter. as Descrocher.

Descroire. To discredit; or, to giue no credit vnto; not to beleeue.

Descroisé: m. ée: f. Vncrossed; set straight.

Descroiser. To vncrosse; to open, diuide, lay, or set straight a thing which stands acrosse.

Descroissement: m. A decreasing; minishing; lessening, waning.

Descroistre. To decrease, diminish, wane, wax lesse, weare away.

Descroté: m. ée: f. Rubbed off, scowred out, wiped away, as durt, &c.

Descroter. To rub off, scowre out, wipe away, durt.

Descroteur: m. A rubber, or maker cleane of cloathes; also, one that rubs on, or runnes ouer, things.

Descrotoire: f. A rubbing-brush.

Descroulé: m. ée: f. Shaken asunder.

Descrouler. To shake asunder.

Descroyant. Distrusting, misbeleeuing, not beleeuing.

Descuire. To vnseeth; or leaue seething.

Descuvé: m. ée: f. Tunned, or taken out of a fat, or tub.

Descuver. To take out of a fat, or tub.

Desdaignable: com. Disdainable, contemptible, despiseable.

Desdaigné: m. ée: f. Disdained, scorned, contemned, despised.

Desdaignement: m. A disdaining, despising, scorning, contemning.

Desdaigner. To disdaine, despise, contemne, scorne, loath, not to vouchsafe; to make vile account of.

Desdaigneur: m. A disdainer, scorner, contemner, despiser.

Desdaigneusement. Disdainfully, scornfully, contemptibly; proudly, coily, squeamishly.

Desdaigneux: m. euse: f. Disdainfull, scornefull, coy, squeamish.

Desdaing: m. Disdaine, scorne, contempt; coinesse; proudsqueamishnesse; hautinesse; despight; moodinesse.

Desdamer. To vnladie; to denie a Ladie her due title, or stile; to depriue her of the title, or stile of Ladie; also, to take a man at Tables, a Queene at Draughts.

Desdetté: m. ée: f. Rid out of debt, set cleere aboord.

Desdetter. To rid out of debt.

Desdict: m. icte: f. Vnsayed, recanted, reuoked; contradicted; forbidden.

Desdié: m. ée: f. Dedicated; giuen, or deuoted vnto; destined, purposed, reserued for.

Desdiement: m. A dedicating, deuoting; destining vnto; reseruing, or purposing for.

Desdier. To dedicate, giue, or deuote vnto; to destine, reserue, or purpose for.

Se Desdire. To vnsay, recant, retract, reuoke; forbid; contradict himselfe, go from his word.

Desdommage. as Desdommagement. Desdommagé: m. ée: f. indemnified, saued harmelesse; discharged.

Desdommagement: m. An indemnitie, or indemnifying; a sauing harmelesse; an amends-making.

Desdommager. To indemnifie, saue harmelesse; discharge; make an amends vnto.

Desdoré: m. ée: f. vngilt; or whose gilding is worne off.

Desdorer. To vngild; to take the gold off.

Desdormi. Awaked; roused, raised from sleeping. Les mains desdormies. Vnastonied, vnbenummed hands.

Desdormir. To awake, rouse, raise from sleepe; to quicken, vnbenumme, take away the drousinesse of.