Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/321

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or sleightly ouer; onely to glaunce at. Les Alemanes ont l'esprit aux doigts: Pro. The Germanes are excellent Artificers; or haue nimbler fingers then heads. L'herbe qu'on cognoist on la doit lier à son doigt. pro. Looke, Herbe. Qui a besoing de feu le cerche avec le doigt: Pro. Let him that needeth fire, take paines to find it. Qui remue les pierres ses doigts casse. Pro. He that remoueth stones crusheth his fingers; harsh things are seldome stirred without harme. Vn mesme couteau me coupe le pain, & le doigt. Pro. (Appliable vnto any thing that does both good and ill offices.)

Doigtier: m. A thimble or fingerstall; also, as Digital. Doil: m. A pipestaffe; and, (lesse properly) any vessell, or caske of a (reasonable) big size.

Doile: The same; or, as Douille. Panneau de doile A cant pane, or peece.

Doille: as Douille. Doire; for Doüaire; A dower, or dowrie. Doisil: m. A faucet.

Dol: m. The name of a city in Burgondy. Fiebvre de Dol. The french pockes.

Dol. m. Deceit, fraud, guile, craft, tromperie, trecherie, falshood, wilinesse.

Dolé m. ée: f. Squared, planed, hewed smooth, wrought, or made plaine with an ax, or addis.

Doleance: f. A wayling, lamentation, moaning complaining, waymenting.

Dolent. Sorrowfull, heauie, greeuing; painfull, aking, smarting; wretched, wailefull, miserable, wofull.

Dolentement. Mournefully, heauily, sorrowfully, wofully, grieuously, wailefully.

Doler (du bois.) To chip, to square, to plane, to hew smooth, to make plaine with an ax, or addis.

Doleur: f. Griefe, sorrow, anguish, woe, sadnesse, teene, heauinesse, ache, paine, smart, sorenesse; a throw, throbbing, wringing.

Doleux: m. euse f. Wilie, deceitfull, Subtill, guilefull, fraudulent; false, trecherous.

Doliman as Dolyman. Doloir. To greeue, sorrow; moane; throb; to ake, warch, paine, smart. Bien escorche à qui ne deult: Pro. No matter though they flayed be who feele no paine in flaying. Femme se plaind, femme se deult, femme est malade quand elle veut: Pro. Looke Femme. Doloire: f. A (Coopers) ax, or addis; also a Carpenters ax, or plaining hatchet.

Dolouëre. as Doloire. Doloureusement. Dolourously; heauily, sorrowfully, wailefully, most wofully; also, grieuously, or till it ake gaine.

Doloureux: m. euse: f. Sorrowfull, dolorous, painefull, wofull; also, smarting, grieuing, payning, or putting to much paine. Parties doloureuses. Tender, or which cannot indure to be touched.

Dolousant. Wayling, lamenting, waymenting, making moane.

Dolouser. To wayle, moane, lament, wayment, complaine.

Dolyman: m. A Turkish gowne, long coate, or vpper garment; collerlesse, and closed with long buttons downe to the girdlestead.

Dom Iehan. Sir Iohn, or, lord Iohn.

Domaine: m. A demaine; a mans patrimonie or Inhe-*

*ritance, proper and hereditarie possessions; those whereof he is the right or true Lord, possessor, and absolute owner; also, an absolute, and hereditarie propertie in, and possession of, land, &c; also, an honor; or a principall Fief, Mannor, or Mannorhouse; the place whereof inferior Fiefs are held, or vassalls hould. Domaine congeable; See Congeable. Domaine de la Couronne. The crowne land; Ancient demesne; or th' ancient Inheritance of the crowne; also, any land which hath remained in the Kings hands, and bene disposed of by his officers, for the space of ten yeares. Domaine forain; Was at the first, in Francis the firsts time, an Imposition of iiij. d. in the pound vpon all kind of wares, and v. s. Tour. vpon euery Queuë of wine, sold: whereunto Henry the second ioyned two other Imposts, Resve, & Haut passage, & tooke for them all together viij. d. in the pound; but afterwards disunited them in effect (leuying their seuerall and vsuall rates,) and ioyned them onely in this name. Domaine de France. as Domaine de la Couronne, And, as it, vnalienable; not by any especiall law, but by the generall custome of all Monarchies, interessed in the preseruation therof, as of the chiefest dowrie which they bring to their princes at their comming to the crowne. Domaine immuable. Censives, Chiefe rents, and all fundamentall rights, and seruices, which follow the land howsoeuer it descend, or be disposed of. Domaine muable. A propertie in a thing whose value may be improued, or impaired, according to the yearelie letting of it; (generally) such land as is, or may be ordinarily, and often leassed; and the rents thereof raised, or lessened vpon euerie lease. Domaine du Roy. The kings demaine; the rents, reuenue, profits, & fruits of the crown lands; also, the benefit of casualties, and rights of Seigneurie, or of Iurisdiction thereunto belonging; also all manner of lands confiscated by, or forfeited vnto him; and such as he had in his owne right before he came to the crowne; and such as he purchased after. Domaine du Royaume. as Domaine de la Couronne. De son domaine faire son Fief. Looke Fief. De son Fief faire son domaine. c'est, reünir à sa Table, & raproprier à son domaine le Fief, ou Censif tenu de soy: ¶Ragueau. Domanial: m. ale f. Of, or belonging to, a demayne, Mannor, or principall Fief. Exploict domanial. A seisure made by a Lord of his tenants land, for his homage, rights, and seruices withheld from him.

Domanier: m. Th' owner of a demayne, or of land in demayne.

Domanier: m. ere f. as Domanial. Droict domanier. The priueledge a Lord Iusticer hath, to proceed, of his owne authoritie, by way of execution, without any written commission, in cases that concerne his ancient demaine, or th' accustomed rights thereof. Seigneur domanier. The Lord of the soile of a Mannor; a chiefe Lord.

Dome. A Townehouse, Guildhall, Statehouse, Meetinghouse in a Citie (from that of Florence, which is called so;) also, as Dosme. Domestique: com. Domesticall, housall, of our househould; also, tame, familier, priuie.

Domestiquement. Domestically, tamely, familierly, priuately, at home, within doores.