Destrempé: m. ée:f. Steeped, soaked, moistened, made fluide, liquid, or thinne; seasones, or laied in water; softened, or allayed by watering.
Destrempement: m. A soaking, steeping, moistening, watering.
Destremper. To soake, steepe, moisten, water, season, or lay in water; soften, or allay, by laying in water; to make fluide, liquid, or thinne.
Destrempis. as Destrempement. Destrenché. as Destranché. Destrencher. as Destrancher. Destresse: f. Distresse, perplexitie, anguish of mind, scarcitie in estate; a strait, narrow pinch, hard tearmes.
Destrier: m. A Steed, a great horse, or horse of seruice; also, a kind of wafer.
Destroict: m. A strait; a narrow place, or passage; a narrow entrance into, or comming vnto, a way; a way between two hills; also, a narrow sea, or strait between two lands. Le destroict d'un Bailliage. The iurisdiction, precincts, or liberties of a Bailiwicke. Destroict de la gorge. The bottome of the mouth, or iawes, next aboue the Larinx. Destroit. as Destroict. Destroquer. To vntrucke; to alter, anhililate, or goe from, a change agreed on.
Destrousse: f. Spoyle, bootie, pillage, or baggage got from; a ransacking, or stripping of; a hand made vpon, enemies; also, a hostile road, incursion, or inuasion wherein such bootie is got; also, a defeature, ouerthrow; beggering, or vndoing of people.
Destroussé: m. ée: f. Vntrussed, vntucked, vnpacked, vnloaden, vndone; also, robbed, ransacked, stripped (& thereby) vndone.
Destroussement: m. An vnstrussing, vnpacking, vnloading. Destroussement de gents. A robbing, rifling, ransacking, (ruining) of people; a freebooting.
Destroussément. tout destroussément. Flatly, plainly; confidently, resolately; or, quickly, speedily, hastily.
Destrousser. To vntrusse, vntucke; vnload, vnpacke, vndoe; also, to rob, rifle, strip, ransacke, despoile, all commers, or passengers; to freeboot, or boothale.
Destrousseur de gens. A robber, a ransacker of people by the high-way-side; one of S. Nicholas Clerkes; also, a freebooter, or boothaler.
Destruction: f. Destruction; an vtter subuersion, or deuastation; an absolute ruine, or ouerthrow of.
Destruict: m. cte: f. Destroyed; vtterly subuerted, or deuasted; absolutely ruined, or ouerthrowne.
Destruire. To destroy; ruine, subuert, ouerthrow; deuast, make desolate; rauage, or spoile, vtterly.
Destruisant. Destroying; vtterly subuerting, or deuasting; absolutely ruining, or ouerthrowing.
Destruiseur: m. A destroyer; a ruiner, subuerter, spoyler of euerie thing he deales with, or comes neere.
Desvalizé: m. ée: f. Rifled, stripped, robbed of all hee hath.
Desvalizement: m. A rifling, robbing, stripping.
Desvalizer. To rob, despoyle, rifle; strip out of all hee hath; to depriue of cloake-bag, bag and baggage.
Desveiné: m. ée: f. Bereft of all his veines, or bloud.
Desveiner. To bereaue, or depriue of all his veines; to sucke the bloud out of.
Desvelopé: m. eé: f. Vnwrapped, vnfoulden; opened, vndone; displaied, spread abroad; also, cleered.
Desvelopement: m. An vnwrapping, vnfoulding; vndoing, opening; manifesting, displaying, spreading open.
Desveloper. To vnwrap, vnfould; vndoe, open, shew forth, display, spread abroad; rid, vnpester, cleere.
Desvely: m. ie: f. Changed through sicknesse, or indisposition; whose face is so altered that a man can hardly know him.
Desverdiat. Deflowred, as a virgine that ledchers: ¶Langued. Desverrouillé: m. ée: f. Vnboulted.
Desverouiller vn huis. To vnboult, or vnsparre a doore.
Desvesti: m. ie: f. Deuested, vncloathed; disseised, dispossessed.
Desvestir. To vncloath, despoyle, depriue; disseise, dispossesse of. Se desvestir de. To forgoe, leaue, giue ouer, passe away, dispossesse himselfe of.
Desvidé: m. ée: f. as Devidé. Desvider. To wind thread &c, from blades into bottomes.
Desvidoir: m. A paire of blades, or yarnwindles.
Desvié: m. ée: f. Misled, put out of the way; also, dead, or deceased.
Desvier. To mislead, or put out of the way; also, to die, decease, or depart this life.
Desvisagé: m. ée: f. Deformed, disfigured; defaced; whose face is rent, or torne.
Desvisager. To deforme, disfigure, bereaue of feature; to deface.
Desultoire. Chevaux desultoires. Two horses (tied together) from the one whereof an actiue rider leapes vpon the other, in a full careere; also, horses that bee led, and kept fresh for the vse of Souldiors, which in a fight haue tired those they serued on.
Desumbré: m. ée: f. Vnshaded, or depriued of the shadow.
Desumbrer. To vnshade, or depriue of shadow.
Desuni: m. ie: f. Disunited, disioyned, vncoupled, seuered, sundered.
Desunion: f. Disuniting, disunion, disiunction, seperation.
Desunir. To disunited, vncouple, disioyne, diuide, seperate, sunder.
Desvoilé: m. ée: f. Vnuayled, manifested, openly shewed.
Desvoiler. To vnuayle, discouer, manifest, take away the vayle from.
Desvoyé: m. ée: f. Misled, strayed; in an errour; brought out of the way. Chemin desvoyé. An indirect, vnusuall, or vncertaine, way. Estomac desvoyé. A loosse, weakened, or distempered, stomacke.
Desvoyement: m. An erring, wandering, straying one knowes not whither; a misleading. Desvoyement d'estomac. Loosenesse, or weaknesse, of the stomacke. Desvoyement de riviere. The turning of a riuer out of it vsuall course, or channell; also, a damme, or banke made for the purpose.
Desvoyer. To mislead, or bring out of the way. Se desvoyer. To erre, stray, swarue, decline out of the way.
Desusage: m. Disusage, discontinuance.
Desusitation. A disusing, discontinuing, leauing off.
Desusité: m. ée: f. Disused, discontinued, left off, grown out of vse.
Desusiter. To disuse, discontinue, disaccustome, leaue off.