Page:A dictionarie of the French and English tongues - Cotgrave - 1611.djvu/492

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

  Gith sauvage. Wild Githen, wild Nigella.

Gitte: f. A sprig; or putting out, in a branch.

Giver. as Girer. Givereau: m. A pide, or black and white water-fowle, somewhat lesse then a ducke.

Giure: m. A white, or hoare frost vpon trees after great, and long freezing.

Glace: f. Ice; also, the glasse of a looking-glasse. Alun de glace. Roche Allum; so tearmed because at first it is melted, and made into great flakes, like yee. Estaim de glace. Looke Estaim. Ferré à glace. Shod with frost-nayles (whence) also, steadie-footed, sure of foot, seldome slipping, failing, or falling. Gosier ferré à glace. An hardened or sencelesse palate, a paued mouth.

Glacé: m. ée: f. Frozen, congealed, hardened, turned into, couered ouer with, yce; also, benummed, or grown sencelesse by extremitie of cold; also, flesh-basted, as the lining of a cloke, &c; also, inserted, or foisted, as a word, line, chapter, &c, into a booke.

Glacer. To freeze; harden, congeale, turne into yce; to couer, or ouercast with yce; also, to benumme, beclumpse, make sencelesse, by extreame cold; also, to flesh-bast ; or stitch downe the lyning of a garment thereby to keepe it from sagging. Glacer vn mot. To insert, put; thrust, or foist, a word into a writing.

Glacial: m. ale: f. Ycie, ouergrowne with yce, euer frozen, or congealed by extreame cold; also, extreamely cold.

Glacis: m. A place made slipperie by wet lately fallen, and frozen on; also, a sloaping banke or causey; also, a sloaping, sloapenesse, gentle bending downewards; and hence; En glacis. Sloaping, asloape, gently inclining, declining by little and little.

Glaçoir: m. A Iakes, or Priuie.

Glaçons: m. Isicles, or flakes of yce; also, flawes in stones resembling flakes of yce.

Gladiateur: m. A Fencer, or Maister of Fence.

Gladiation: f. Fencing.

Glagou: as Glayeul; or, Sedge; also, a dot, or collop of flegme spet out. Glaieul. as Glayeul. Glainage: m. A gleaning.

Glainé: m. ée: f. Gleaned.

Glainer. as Glaner; To gleane. Glaineur: m. A Gleaner.

Glaire: f. Grauell; sand, and small pible stones; or, sand mingled with stones; also, a whitish, and slimie soyle. La glaire d'vn oeuf. The white of an egge.

Glaireux: m. euse: f. Slimie; also, grauellie, full of grauell. Terre glaireuse (in Maison Rustique.) as Terre glaize. Glais. as Glayeul; Corne-flag, Corne-sedge, Corne-gladen. Glaitel. as Glais. Glaive: m. A Gleaue, or Sword; also, a Launce, or horse-*mans staffe.

Glaize. terre glaize. A moist, and slimie white soyle.

Glammet: m. A Mew, or Sea-mew.

Gland: m. An Acorne; Mast of Oakes, or other trees.
  Gland de Iupiter. A Chestnut.
  Gland de mer. A kind of Muscle, or shell-fish, that somewhat resembles an Acorne.

  Gland onguentaire. The Aromaticall nut, or fruit, whereof the Perfumers oyle of Benne is made. Attendre le gland qui tombe. To liue in expectation of profit, or preferment (at Court, &c.)

Glandage: m. Mast; also, Mastage; the season of turning hogs into the woods; the feeding of hogs, by Mast, in woods; th'Agistment, or laying of swine into mastie woods.

Glandagé: m. ée: f. Fed, or nourished (as hogs) with mast.

Glandager les porceaux. To feed, or nourish hogs with Mast; to agist, or lay, swine in mastie woods.

Glandaux. The name of a kind of Oliues.

Glande: f. A kernell; a fleshie substance filled with pores, and growing betweene the flesh and skin. Glande pituitaire. A certaine kernell in the head, which receiues the excrements contained in the Tunnell thereof.

Glandée. bonne glandée. Good store of Mast, a good yeare for Acornes.

Glandéer. To get, or gather Mast.

Glandeux: m. euse: f. Mastie, full of Mast, well stored with Acornes.

Glandier: m. ere: f. Of, or belonging to Mast; also, as Glandeux. Glands: m. Pellets, Bullets.

Glandulaire: com. Kernellie; of a kernell, like a kernell, in kernells.

Glandule: f. A little kernell. Glandule carniforme. A great, fleshie, and soft kernell, consisting of many small ones, & placed vnder the ventricle, to keepe it from touching the back, which otherwise would hurt it; we call it (especially in edible beasts) the Sweet-bread.

Glanduleux: m. euse: f. Kernellie, full of fleshie kernells.

Glane: f. A gleaning; also, the corne thats gleaned, or left for the gleaner. Il y a assez de champ pour faire glane. There is stuffe ynough to worke on, meanes enow to profit by.

Glané: m. ée: f. Gleaned.

Glanement. A gleaning; as Glaneure. Glaner. To gleane; to picke vp eares of corne after reapers. Qui glane il ne fait pas ce qu'il veut: Prov. Somewhat like our, Beggers must be no chusers.

Glaneur: m. A gleaner.

Glaneure: f. A gleaning, or gathering vp of loosse eares of corne, left by reapers; a leasing of corne.

Glangion: m. A little Sea-cut, or Cuttle-fish.

Glap: m. The barking of a dog.

Glappier. as Clapier. Glappir. To barke like a dog, to yealpe; yawle, bawle.

Glappissement. A barking, or yealping; a bawling, or yawling.

Glappisseur: m. A barker, yealper; bawler, yawler.

Glas: m. Noise, crying, bawling; also, yce; also, a knell for the dead.

Glas. Bled glas. Blought Wheat. Terre glase. Fat earth.

Glason. as Glazon; A clod, sod, or turfe of earth. Glasonneux: m. euse: f. Cloddie, soddie, turfie; full of clods, of sods, of turues.

Glassé: m. ée: f. Seeke Glacé.

Glasser. as Glacer.

Glassis: m. A strong penthouse vpon the walls, or the rampire, of a fortresse; also, a sloaping causey, damme, or banke, neere the water; See Glacis.