*ther fullie whole, nor broken.
Entrecasser. Halfe, or almost to breake. s'Entrecasser les dents. To bruise the teeth by gnashing them hard one against another.
s'Entreceder. To yeeld, or giue place one to th' other.
s'Entreceler. To hide, or conceale one another.
Entre-cep. The distance betweene stocke and stocke.
s'Entrecercher. To search for each other.
Entrecesse. sans en. Without intermission, intermedium, rest, pause; or ceasing.
s'Entrechamailler. Armed men to hacke, or slash one another, or each other.
Entrechangé: m. ée: f. Interchanged.
s'Entrechanger. To interchange; or, halfe to alter, almost to change; and hence; La veuë m'entrechange. My sight diminisheth, mine eyes grow dimme.
s'Entrecharger. To charge one another.
Entrechasse: f. A crosse caper.
Entrechaucher. To tread vpon, to trample amongst.
s'Entrecherir. as s'Entrecaresser. Entrecheris: m. ies: f. Mutually cherished, made much of one by th' other.
Entrechevaucher. To ride betwixt, or among.
Entrechoc: m. An intershocke; a mutuall, or interchangeable, rushing one vpon another.
s'Entrechoisir. To cull, picke, chuse out, one another.
s'Entrechoquer. Two armies, or enemies violently to cope one with, rush one against, or presse one vpon, another; to interchange, or come together with, a furious shocke.
Entrecler: m. ere: f. A little cleere, somewhat bright or light, or betweene darke and light, as in a twylight.
Entrecognoistre. To discerne from others, to know one among many others. s'Entrecognoistre. To know one another, or haue acquaintance together.
Entrecogneu: m. euë: f. Knowne among others, discerned from others.
Entrecolomne. The space, or place betweene pillers.
Entrecolomnement. A leauing of space between piller and piller.
s'Entrecommuniquer. To communicate one with another.
s'Entreconvier. To lathe, bid, inuite, one another.
s'Entrecosser. To iurre, or butt together, as Rammes.
s'Entrecoudoyer. To iustle, or elbow, one another; to giue one another the elbow.
Entrecoulé: m. ée: f. Glid, slid, runne in betweene, or among.
Entrecouler. To glide, slide, runne betweene, or among.
Entrecoupé: m. ée: f. Cut betweene, halfe cut; cut off in the middest; interrupted.
Entrecouper. To cut betweene, or in the middest; halfe to cut; also, to prune, cut off, or picke out, vnnecessarie sprigs from among the fruitfull braunches; also, to interrupt.
Entrecoupeuse: f. An intercutting; an halfe cutting; an interruption, a cutting off in the middest.
Entrecourir. To ruune on both sides, ioyntly to runne. s'Entrecourir. To incounter; to runne one vpon another.
s'Entrecraindre. To stand in feare one of another.
Entrecroisé: m. ée: f. Thwarted, intercrossed, wrought, or marked ouercrosse.
Entrecroisement: m. A thwarting, or intercrossing, or
lying one orecrosse another.
s'Entrecroiser. To intercrosse; to thwart, intangle, or lie orecroße one another.
Entrecroisure: f. A double crosse, or intercrossing.
Entrecueilli: m. ie: f. Picked betweene, gathered from among.
Entrecuellir. To picke, or gather betweene, or from among.
Entrecuisses. The cods of a wild Boare.
s'Entredebvoir. To owe each vnto other.
s'Entredefendre. To defend one another.
s'Entredemander des nouvelles. To aske one of another how the world goes.
Entredent. The space that is betweene two teeth.
s'Entredepecer. To pull one another in peeces.
s'Entredeschirer. To teare each other asunder.
s'Entredesfaire. To vndoe, or defeat, one another.
Entredeu: m. euë: f. Due interchangeably, betweene man and man, or from one to another.
Entredeux: m. A distance, a space, partition, vacant place, or time betweene, or in the middest of; an intermedium, or interual; any thing that parts, or diuides, other things. Il fut entredeux de le tuer. He was about to kill him; or in doubt whether to kill him or no. Vn livre relié avec du papier blanc entredeux. A booke bound with a leafe of cleane, between each leafe of printed, paper.
s'Entrediffamer. To defame, disgrace, discredit one another.
s'Entredire iniures. To raile at, or to reuile, one another.
s'Entredisants. Telling one another, saying one to the other.
Entre-discerner. To discerne, or know one from the other; to make a difference betweene themselues.
s'Entredommager. To wrong, or hinder each th' other.
Entredonné: m. ée: f. Interchanged, exchanged, giuen one for another.
s'Entredonner. To interchange, exchange, giue each to the other; s'entredonner courage. To hearten, or encourage one another.
Entredormir. To slumber; to lie betweene sleeping, and waking.
Entredoubté: m. ée: f. Staggered at, somewhat doubted of, or whereof one is partly in suspence.
Entredoubter. To stagger at, somewhat to doubt of; to be in suspence.
Entrée: f. An entrie, passage, entrance, allie, way, or path leading vnto a place; a gate, a doore, or threshold of a house; an accesse; a meane to come vnto a thing; an entring, or going in; a beginning, or ouerture; the first blow giuen, stone laid, yce broken; also, custome, or impost, for marchandise brought into a place; also, the income paid by a purchaser vnto his new Land-lord; also, a present, or gratuitie bestowed on a Prince, &c, at his first entrie into a place.
L'entrée de table. The first course; or, the meat thats first serued vp, at table.
Entrée de vin és villes closes. An imposition of v.s. Tour. vpon euerie Muid of wine brought into a walled towne, or into the suburbes thereof, to be sold; first raised by Charles the ix. and since enhaunced by Henrie the third vnto xx.s. Tournois.
Amende de tost entrée. Looke Amende.
Droict d'entrée. as Droict de presence.
La souris qui n'a qu'vne entrée est incontinent happée: Prov. The mouse that hath but one hole is soon