Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/414

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  • combe; also, to lamme, cudgell, bang, thwacke, belabor, beat. Cheval roigneux n'a cure qu'on l'estrille: Prov. The scabbed horse cares not for currying. Tel estrille fauveau qui puis le mord: Prov. The vngratefull iade bites him that does him good.


Estrilloir: m. That which is wrapped about thread, in winding, to keepe the fingers from being cut therewith. ¶Orleannois. Estrindore. A kind of Brittish daunce. ¶Rab. Estripé: m. ée: f. Vntriped, vnbowelled, with his guts, or bowels about his heeles.

Estriqué: m. ée: f. Pulled on, as a boot &c; also, as Estricqué. Estriquer. To pull on boots, or boot-hose; also, to force a wild beast out of his denne, or out of thickets, into the plaine. S'estriquer. To pranke, tricke, decke, or trimme vp himselfe.

Estriver. To put foot into the stirrup; as, Il estrive trop; he puts his foot too farre into the stirrup; also, to striue, debate, varie, contend, brawle, or brable with.

Estriveur: m. A scolder, brawler, brabler, contentious person.

Estriveux: m. euse: f. Contentious, litigious, brabling, vnquiet, brawling, full of debate, euer wrangling with one or other.

Estriviere: f. A stirrup leather. Bailler les estrivieres. To beat, or lash, with a stirrup leather. En disant cela il donne des expoussettes (que ie ne die des estrivieres) à l'autre; in saying that, he somewhat touches (perhaps he taxes) or, he lugs (if he lash not) the other.

Estroicissement: m. A contraction, straitning, narrowing, restraining.

Estroict: m. A strait of land betweene two hils, or of the sea betweene two lands; and (more generally) any strait, narrow place, or plot. Mettre à l'estroict. To driue to a narrow strait, or to an extremitie; to put vnto the pinch, or to his plunges. Ranger à l'estroict. The same; or, as; Tenir à l'estroict. To restraine, keepe short, hold vnto hard meat, or conditions.

Estroict: m. cte: f. Strait, narrow, close; contracted, restrained; also, strict, hard, pinching; rigorous, austere, seuere. Large de bouche, & estroict de Ceincture; liberall of tongue, but sparing in purse. Voila vn cheval qui est estroict, viz. Thats narrow before. ¶Parisien. Estroictement. Straitly, narrowly, closely; strictly, hardly; austerely, seuerely.

Estroisseur: f. Straitnesse, narrownesse, contraction.

Estroissi: m. ie: f. as Estreci. Estroissir. To straiten, pinch, restraine, contract, make narrow or close; hemme in.

Estroit. as Estroict. Estron: m. A turd.

Estronçonné: m. ée: f. Trunked, or cut off by the trunke.

Estronçonner. To trunke, to cut off by the trunke.

Estropiat. Lame, criple, maymed, halting, wanting some principall member.

Estropié. Lamed, maymed, made criple.
  Estropié de caboche, ou de ceruelle; franticke, witlesse, braine-sicke, braine-crackt.

Estropier. To mayme, lame, becriple, or make a criple.

Estrouble. as Estouble. Stuble.

Estrousse: f. An absolute sale, and deliuerie of a thing vnto him that offers the most for it.

Estroussé: m. ée: f. Vnpacked, vntrussed; also, sold outright, and deliuered to him that offers most.

Estrousser. To vntrusse, vnpacke; vnty, or vndo a trusse, or packe; also, to sell, and deliuer a thing vnto him that offers, or giues, most for it.

Estude: f. A Studie; a priuate Cabinet or Closet to studie in; also, studie; diligent search, musing, meditation, beating of the braine about matters of learning; and (more generally) a care, diligence, labour, indeuour to compasse any matter; also, an affection, fancie, humor, desire, appetite, good will, great mind, vnto.

Estudiant: m. A Student, a Scholler, one that followes his booke.

Estudie: f. as Estude. Estudié: m. ée: f. Studied; mused, meditated on, seriously thought of; also, indeuoured, laboured, diligently plied; also, affected, fancied.

Estudier. To studie, muse, meditate; beat the braines about; indeuour, labour, cast how to get; vse diligence in, bend the mind vnto, bestow great care vpon; also, to affect, or fancie in the heart.

Esturgeon: m. A Sturgion fish. Pescher des Esturgeons en l'air. Seeke Pescher. Estuve: f. A Stoue; Hot-house, Hot-bath.

Estuvé: m. ée: f. Soaked, bathed, stued, washed in warme liquor.

Estuvée. Vne carpe à l'estuvée. A stued Carpe.

Estuvement: m. A soaking, bathing, stuing.

Estuver. To stue; soake, bathe; also, to warme. S'estuver. To sweat in a Hot-house; to wash himselfe in hot waters. Quand vous avez si longuement demeuré à vous estuver, & crié à gorge rompuë. When you haue stayed so long soaking in the raine, &c.

Estuves: f. Stewes; also, Stoues, or Hot-houses.

Estuvier: m. ere: f. Of, or belonging to, a Stewes, or Hot-house.

Estuy: m. A sheath, case, or box to put things in; and (more particularly) a case of little instruments, as sizzars, bodkin, pen-knife, &c, now commonly tearmed, an Ettwee. Estuy d'escriptoire. A Pennar. L'Estuy des grains. The huske, pill, hull, or hulling of corne. L'Estuy d'un'Image. A Tabernacle, Case, or Couering for an Image.

Estuyé: m. ée: f. Sheathed, cased; couered with, put into, shut vp in, a sheath, or case.

Estuyer. To sheath, case; couer with, put into, shut vp in, a sheath, or case.

Estyrolle: f. The loossenesse, and pilling, or clefts, of the skin about the root of the nayles.

Esvachir. To flag; to slacken, or grow loosse; and ratch, or stretch by loossenesse.

Esvaluer. To value, rate, prize, estimate.

Esvanide: com. Feeble, weak, faint, of no force; withered, fruitlesse, decayed, without vigor; stale, past the best.

Esvanouï: m. ie: f. Vanished; slipt out of sight, gone on a suddaine; also, swooned, or in a traunce.

s'Esvanouïr. To vanish; to slip out of sight, be gone on a suddaine; also, to swoone, or fall into a traunce.

Esvanouïssement: m. A swooning; also, a vanishing out of sight.

Esvanouy. Vanished; swooned, fallen into a traunce.