Destination: f. A destination, ordainement, appointment.
Destiné: m. ée: f. Destinated, ordained, appointed vnto, purposed for. Nul vent ne fait pour celuy qui n'a point de port destiné. No helpe serues him that runnes vncertaine courses (or knowes not where to end them.)
Destinée: f. as Destin. Destiner. To destinte, ordaine, appoint vnto; to purpose for.
Destistre. To vnweaue, vntwist, vnplait; loosse, dissolue, vndoe.
Destituable: com. Destituable; disappointable.
Destitué: m. ée: f. Destitute, vnfurnished, or disappointed of.
Destituer. To disappoint, abandon, forsake, faile at a pinch; to leaue destitute, or vnfurnished of.
Destitution: f. A destitution, or destituting; a leauing, failing, disappointing. Destitution de compagnie. Lonelinesse, or solitarinesse, want of companie. Ils poursuyvirent la destitution d'aucuns Capitaines. They sued to haue some Captaines cassed.
Destombi: m. ie: f. Vnclumpsed, vnbenummed, vnastonied; restored vnto warmth, sence, motion.
Destombir. To vnbenumme, vnclumpse, vnastonie; restore vnto warmth, sence, or motion.
Destonnement: m. A discord, or iarre, in sound; also, a changing of tune.
Destonner. To change, or alter, a tune; to take it higher, or lower.
Destordement: m. A wringing, writhing, wrinching, a crooking, bowing, bending awrie.
Destordre. To writh, wrie, crooke, wrinch, wring, bow, bend, wreath, turne out of the right way. Se destordre. To stray, to erre, wander, decline from, or goe out of, the way.
Destorse: f. A writh, wrinch, wring; also, an errour; also, an erring, straying, or wandering out of the way; also, a by-way, side-way, or turning-way; also, misfortune, hinderance, incombrance.
Destortillé: m. ée: f. Opened, vnwrithen, vnwrapped, vnwound.
Destortiller. To vnwrith, vnwind, open, vnwrap.
Destortoire. as Destournoire. Destoupé. Vnstopped, vnstoppelled.
Destouper. To vnstop, or pull the stopple out of.
Destour: m. A turning, by-way, crooked way; also, a blind corner betweene hills, or in a house, wherein men may hide themselues; also, a cunning shift, suttle euasion, craftie auoidance.
Destourbé: m. ée: f. Disturbed, troubled, impeached, hindered, interrupted, incombred.
Destourbement: m. A hindering, letting, stopping, impeaching.
Destourber. To disturbe, troulbe, comber; let, hinder, interrupt; also, as Destourner; whence; Sans vous destourber gueres de vostre chemin. without turning you much out of your way.
Destourbeur: m. A disturber, troubler; hinderer, letter, interrupter; a troublesome fellow, combersome ghest, prating, or busie companion.
Destourbier: m. A disturbance; comber, trouble, interruption, impediment, incombrance, let, hindrance.
Entre la bouche, & la cuillier souvent advient grand destourbier: Prov. Great lets oft thrust betweene the spoone and mouth; mischances happen when men thinke all sure.
Destourné: m. ée: f. Turned, declined, withdrawne, diuerted, alienated, dissuaded, remoued, altered from; also, conueyed, filched, purloyned. Lieux destournez. By-places, blind corners, vnhaunted roomes, deauelie habitations, solitarie lodgings, dwellings which stand out of all high-wayes.
Destournement: m. A turning, diuersion, diuerting; a withdrawing, dissuasion, distraction; alienating, esstranging, remouing from; also, a conueying, or pilfering away. Destournement de pieces de procez. A concealing, or suppressing of bookes, or euidences.
Destourner. To turne, diuert, distract, avert, withdraw, dissuade, remoue, alter, alienate, estrange from; also, to take away craftily, conuey away falsly, forestall with violence; to filtch, pilfer, conuert vnto his owne vse what was prouided for another. Se destourner de. To forbeare the companie of; to withdraw his fauour, and loue from. Se destourner du chemin. To erre, wander, swarue, goe astray, decline from the right way; or (as we say) goe by the way. Se destourner d'un dard. To auoid, eschew, or bend from, a dart, by the nimble turning, or leaping aside.
Destournoire: f. A hunting-pole (wherewith combersome branches are turned aside by a wood-man passing through thickets.)
Destourtoire. as Destournoire. Destrabord. Starboord; the right side of a ship.
Destracqué: m. ée: f. as Destraqué. Destracquer. To put from a racke, or, to spoyle the rack, marre the pace, of; to put out of his racke, or pace; (Hence) also, to depraue, disorder, mislead, corrupt, seduce, or draw from honest courses; also, to slaunder, or detract from. Destracquer vn lievre. To vntie the doubles of a Hare.
Destrainct: m. cte: f. Strained, pressed, wrung, vexed extreamely; also, straitened, restrained, abridged of libertie.
Destraincte: f. A narrow strait, or pinch; a hard, or extreame wring; also, a restraine of libertie. Destraincte d'amour. The anguish, impatience, or extremitie of passion, in loue.
Destraindre. To straine, presse, wring, vexe extreamely; also, to straiten, restraine, or abridge of libertie.
Destranché: m. ée: f. Cut off, bewed from, hacked asunder, chopped in peeces.
Destranchement: m. A cutting off, hewing asunder, chopping in peeces.
Destrancher. To cut off, hew from, hacke asunder, mangle, or chop in peeces. Destrancher à coups de langue. To reuile, reproach, rattle vp, raile on.
Destrapé. Beaten, or stamped with the feet; also, rid, or freed (as the feet) from intanglements.
Destraper. To beat, or stampe with the feet; also, to free, rid, or cleere the feet from the things intangling them.
Destraqué: m. ée: f. Put out of a racke, or pace; also, seduced, misled, corrupted, depraued, or drawne from honest courses; also, slaundered, or detracted from.
Destraquer. To spoyle the pace of, or put out of his pace; hence; to depraue, corrupt, mislead, seduce, or draw from honest courses; also, to slaunder, or detract from; Looke Destracquer. Destravé: m. ée: f. Vnshackled, vngyued, vnfettered.
Destraver. To vnshackle, vngyue, vnfetter.