Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/390

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

Escolastrerie: f. A Rectorship or gouernment of, a Superintendencie ouer, a Schoole; also, meane Schollership.

Escole: f. A Schoole; or Colledge, wherein any Art is taught. Chemin de l'escole. The longest way. Faire l'escole buissonniere. To play the truant. Table vaut escole notable: Prov. Table talke is an excellent Schoolemaster.

Escolier: m. A Scholler, Learner; Pupill, Student. Il en parle comme vn escolier d'armes. He speakes thereof ignorantly, improperly, or from the purpose. Escolier babillard prez le feu, & badin hors la classe: Pro. (Meant onely of a meere Scholler; as our) A Master of Art is not worth a fart vnlesse he be in the Schooles.

Escolleté: m. ée: f. Vncollered; whose coller is taken off, or pulled away.

Escolleter. To vncoller; to diuide, plucke, or take away the coller from a garment.

Escolté. Soulier escolté. Looke Escouleté. Escome. The blade (or broad end) of an Oare.

Escomé. Peis escomé. The spit-fish, or sea Pike, so tearmed at Marseille. Esconduire. To deny, or say nay vnto; to refuse, or reiect the request of.

Esconduit: m. ite: f. Denyed; whose request is refused.

Esconjuré: m. ée: f. Driuen, or gotten, away by intreatie, or coniuring.

Esconjurer. To driue away by intreatie, or coniuring.

Esconsé: m. ée: f. Hidden, couered, concealed; set, as the Sunne. ¶Pic. Esconsement. as Absconsement; a concealing. ¶Pic. Esconsement de soleil. The setting of the Sunne.

Esconser. as Absconser; To hide, conceale, couer. ¶Pic. Escopetade. The shot of a Harguebuze, or small Peece.

Escopetin. as Squiopetin. Escopette: f. A Petrouell, Carbine, long Pistoll, short Harguebuze; any such small Gun that goes off by a fire-lock.

Escopetterie: f. Gun-shot; a voley of shot.

Escorce: f. The rinde, or barke of a tree; the outward skin, or pilling of fruit. Mettre le doigt entre le bois & l'escorce. Busily to intermeddle with, or take much notice of, the differences, or vnkindnesses that are betwixt neere friends.

Escorcé: m. ée: f. Barked, pilled, vnrinded; blanched; pared.

Escorcée: f. as Escorcement; also, the pilled, or vnrinded part of a Plant.

Escorcement: m. A barking, pilling, vnrinding; blanching; paring.

Escorcer. To barke, or vnbarke; to pill, pare, blanch, vnrind.

Escorcesque: m. as Corcesque. Escorceur. A barker of trees.

Escorché: m. ée: f. Flayed; vnskinned; excoriated.

Escorche-cul. à escorche-cul. To the flaying of the buttocks; or (as in, Tirer à es.) With bare arse kissing, or dragd along on, the ground.

Escorchement: m. A flaying, or pulling the skin off; also, an excoriation; and hence; Escorchement des boyaux. The bloudie flix.

Escorcher. To flay, or plucke off the skin; also, to excoriate.
  Escorcher les anguilles par la queuë. To goe the wrong way to worke.

  Escorcher le Latin. To inkhornize it, or vse inkhorne tearmes. Escorcher le Regnard. To spue, cast, vomit; (from the subiect to the effect; for the flaying of so stinking a beast is like enough to make them spue that feele it; Looke Regnard.) Assez escorche qui tient le pied: Pro. The Assistant is as guiltie as the Actor; the Accessorie as the Principall; he does mischiefe enough that helpes to doe mischiefe. Bien escorche à qui ne deult: Prov. Sencelesse people may well enough be flayed; or, tis good fleecing of them that haue so much, as they misse not what is gone. À la preuve l'on escorche l'Asne: Pro. (Applyable vnto such things as cannot be tryed without danger.) Beau parler n'escorche langue: Prov. Faire words flay not the tongue; teare no skin, breake no bones.

Escorcherie: f. A flaying house; the place wherein slaughtered beasts are vsually flayed.

Escorcheter. To flay; to pill the rind off, or pull the skin from.

Escorcheur: m. A flayer; also, an Outlaw, or Free-*booter.

Escorchouër: m. A flaying of beasts.

Escorchure: f. A flaying, or pulling the skin off; a gauling, or peeldnesse of any part of the bodie.

Escorçu: m. uë: f. Barkie, hauing a barke.

Escore: com. Plumpe, or straight down, in depth; whence; La mer est escore en ceste coste. The sea is very deepe, or, the channell is on this coast.

Escores. The stocks whereon a ship stands in the docke.

Escorgée: f. A thong, or belt (of leather;) also, a stripe, or lash with a leatherne thong.

Escorne: f. Shame, disgrace, contempt, scorne.

Escorné: m. ée: f. Vnhorned, without hornes, that hath lost his hornes; hence (also) melancholicke, out of heart, out of countenance, ashamed to shew himselfe, as a Deere is, when he hath cast his head; also, vncornered; whose corners are broken, or cut off; and hence; defaced, ruined; scorned, disgraced. Arbre escorné. A tree whose branches are lopt off. Dez escornez. Ground Dice, blunt-cornered Dice.

Escornement: m. An vnhorning, or depriuing of hornes; a disgracing; defacing; baring or bereauing of ornaments.

Escorner. To vnhorne, dishorne, or depriue of hornes; to cut, pull, or take from one a thing which is (or he thinkes is) an ornament, and grace vnto him; to breake off the corners of a square thing; to lop, or shred off the boughes of Trees; to ruine, deface, disgrace any thing. Se laisser escorner. To suffer himselfe to be ridden, made a foole, vsed like a Gull.

Escornicher. Jn stead of Escorner, or Escorcher. ¶Rab. Escorniflé: m. ée: f. Vncornered; whose corners haue beene eaten, or broken off.

Escornifler. To knap, eat, or breake off the corners of; also, to smell a feast, or eat hard, at a feast (which another man payes for;) also, to pick a thanke or carry tales for victuals; or, (vnder pretence of ieasting, or tale-carrying) to procure himselfe accesse vnto feasts, or other mens tables.

Escorniflerie: f. Feast-smelling; fast eating at (other mens) feasts; also, base Parasitisme, ieasting, or tale-carrying, for victuals.